Current:Home > ContactSaudis, other oil giants announce surprise production cuts -Ascend Wealth Education
Saudis, other oil giants announce surprise production cuts
View
Date:2025-04-17 15:13:26
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Saudi Arabia and other major oil producers on Sunday announced surprise cuts totaling up to 1.15 million barrels per day from May until the end of the year, a move that could raise prices worldwide.
Higher oil prices would help fill Russian President Vladimir Putin's coffers as his country wages war on Ukraine and force Americans and others to pay even more at the pump amid worldwide inflation.
It was also likely to further strain ties with the United States, which has called on Saudi Arabia and other allies to increase production as it tries to bring prices down and squeeze Russia's finances.
The production cuts alone could push U.S. gasoline prices up by roughly 26 cents per gallon, in addition to the usual increase that comes when refineries change the gasoline blend during the summer driving season, said Kevin Book, managing director of Clearview Energy Partners LLC. The Energy Department calculates the seasonal increase at an average of 32 cents per gallon, Book said.
So with an average U.S. price now at roughly $3.50 per gallon of regular, according to AAA, that could mean gasoline over $4 per gallon during the summer.
However, Book said there are a number of complex variables in oil and gas prices. The size of each country's production cut depends on the baseline production number it is using, so the cut might not be 1.15 million. It also could take much of the year for the cuts to take effect. Demand could fall if the U.S. enters a recession caused by the banking crisis. But it also could increase during the summer as more people travel.
Even though the production cut is only about 1% of the roughly 100 million barrels of oil the world uses per day, the impact on prices could be big, Book said.
"It's a big deal because of the way oil prices work," he said. "You are in a market that is relatively balanced. You take a small amount away, depending on what demand does, you could have a very significant price response."
Saudi Arabia announced the biggest cut among OPEC members at 500,000 barrels per day. The cuts are in addition to a reduction announced last October that infuriated the Biden administration.
The Saudi Energy Ministry described the move as a "precautionary measure" aimed at stabilizing the oil market. The cuts represent less than 5% of Saudi Arabia's average production of 11.5 million barrels per day in 2022.
Iraq said it would reduce production by 211,000 barrels per day, the United Arab Emirates by 144,000, Kuwait by 128,000, Kazakhstan by 78,000, Algeria by 48,000 and Oman by 40,000. The announcements were carried by each country's state media.
Russia's Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak meanwhile said Moscow would extend a voluntary cut of 500,000 until the end of the year, according to remarks carried by the state news agency Tass. Russia had announced the unilateral reduction in February after Western countries imposed price caps.
All are members of the so-called OPEC+ group of oil exporting countries, which includes the original Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries as well as Russia and other major producers. There was no immediate statement from OPEC itself.
The cuts announced in October — of some 2 million barrels a day — had come on the eve of U.S. midterm elections in which soaring prices were a major issue. President Joe Biden vowed at the time that there would be "consequences" and Democratic lawmakers called for freezing cooperation with the Saudis.
Both the U.S. and Saudi Arabia denied any political motives in the dispute.
Since those cuts, oil prices have trended down. Brent crude, a global benchmark, was trading around $80 a barrel at the end of last week, down from around $95 in early October, when the earlier cuts were agreed.
Analysts Giacomo Romeo and Lloyd Byrne at Jefferies said in a research note that the new cuts should allow for "material" reductions to OPEC inventory earlier than expected and could validate recent warnings from some traders and analysts that demand for oil is weakening.
Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, a Gulf expert at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy, said the Saudis are determined to keep oil prices high enough to fund ambitious mega-projects linked to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's Vision 2030 plan to overhaul the economy.
"This domestic interest takes precedence in Saudi decision-making over relationships with international partners and is likely to remain a point of friction in U.S.-Saudi relations for the foreseeable future," he said.
Saudi Arabia's state-run oil giant Aramco recently announced record profits of $161 billion from last year. Profits rose 46.5% when compared to the company's 2021 results of $110 billion. Aramco said it hoped to boost production to 13 million barrels a day by 2027.
The decades-long U.S.-Saudi alliance has come under growing strain in recent years following the 2018 killing of Saudi dissident Jamal Khashoggi, a U.S.-based journalist, and Saudi Arabia's war with the Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen.
As a candidate for president, Biden had vowed to make Saudi Arabia a "pariah" over the Khashoggi killing, but as oil prices rose after his inauguration he backed off. He visited the kingdom last July in a bid to patch up relations, drawing criticism for sharing a fistbump with Crown Prince Mohammed.
Saudi Arabia has denied siding with Russia in the Ukraine war, even as it has cultivated closer ties with both Moscow and Beijing in recent years. Last week, Aramco announced billions of dollars of investment in China's downstream petrochemicals industry.
veryGood! (83743)
Related
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 vanished 10 years ago today. What have we learned about what happened?
- Dakota Johnson and Chris Martin Engaged: Inside Their Blissful Universe
- Ancestry reveals Taylor Swift is related to American poet Emily Dickinson
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Doritos cuts ties with Samantha Hudson, a trans Spanish influencer, after disturbing posts surface
- NFL free agency 2024: Ranking best 50 players set to be free agents
- 'Normalize the discussion around periods': Jessica Biel announces upcoming children's book
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Who is Katie Britt, the senator who delivered the Republican State of the Union response?
Ranking
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Colorado finds DNA scientist cut corners, raising questions in hundreds of criminal cases
- Three people were rescued after a sailboat caught fire off the coast of Virginia Beach
- Fatal crash in western Wisconsin closes state highway
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Spending bill would ease access to guns for some veterans declared mentally incapable
- 2024 NFL free agency: Predicting which teams top available players might join
- The Absolutely Fire Story of How TikToker Campbell Puckett Became Husband Jett Puckett's Pookie
Recommendation
Small twin
Save up to 71% off the BaubleBar x Disney Collection, Plus 25% off the Entire Site
Program that allows 30,000 migrants from 4 countries into the US each month upheld by judge
Utah troopers stop 12-year-old driver with tire spikes and tactical maneuvers
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
Some fans at frigid Chiefs-Dolphins playoff game underwent amputations, hospital confirms
Washington state achieves bipartisan support to ban hog-tying by police and address opioid crisis
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper rescinds 2021 executive order setting NIL guidelines in the state