23 Dec 2024
Thursday 27 November 2014 - 12:52
Story Code : 132799

Zanganeh says Iran's oil market position close to S. Arabia

Tehran, Nov 27, IRNA -- Irans Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh met with his Saudi counterpart Ali Al-Naimi in Vienna on Wednesday and announced after the meeting that Tehran's oil market position was close to that of Riyadh.
I met minister Naimi and we will continue our discussion, Zanganeh was quoted by Reuters as saying in the Austrian capital hours before an OPEC ministerial meeting to formulate a response to tumbling crude prices.
It is very important for us to have unity inside OPEC. We didnt discuss only about the cut, but we discussed the market situation and our position is close to each other, Zanganeh said.

Al-Naimi said earlier Wednesday crude prices that plunged by a third since June will stabilize while Zanganeh told reporters Iran wouldnt request an output cut by Saudi Arabia at Thursday meeting.

Iran would not cut its oil production regardless of what OPEC ministers decide at a meeting on Thursday because output from the country is already significantly reduced, Zanganeh was quoted by Platts as saying.

Arriving in Vienna for Thursdays meeting of OPEC ministers, Zanganeh said it was also important for non-OPEC producers to contribute to helping keep supply and demand in balance given the recent 30% fall in global oil prices. Asked whether Iran would reduce production if OPEC countries agreed on a cut, Zanganeh said never.

We are producing under our share, he said, adding that no one would expect Iran to reduce its output. Iran produced around 2.83 million b/d last month, according to Platts estimates, well down from the 3.6 million b/d the country was producing in late 2011 before international sanctions against Tehran limited its exports.

Asked what Irans position was regarding the OPEC talks, Zanganeh said: We need to speak to others and exchange views with them on how to deal with the situation. The most important thing for all of us is the unity and solidarity of OPEC. He said some OPEC members, but not Iran itself, believed it was time to defend market share in the face of growing supplies from non-OPEC nations.

Zanganeh also said that non-OPEC countries should make an effort to help rebalance the market given the recent sharp fall in oil prices. In this situation I believe we need to have the contribution of non-OPEC producers for managing the market, he said. On Tuesday, Naimi met with top oil officials from non-OPEC Russia and Mexico, as well as fellow OPEC member Venezuela, to discuss the current oil market, but the four sides did not agree on reducing production to shore up prices.

Asked by how much he thought OPEC could reduce production as a whole, Zanganeh said: At the moment, I cannot talk about a number. We must talk with our colleagues. What is a given is that OPEC never forgets its responsibility about adjusting the income of its members. And OPEC has showed that under very difficult conditions it can manage the issues with its wisdom.

We cannot decide without consensus and we need approval of all OPEC members to reach our decision. OPEC has a maturity, unity and solidarity for any decision [to] maximize the benefit of the producers and OPEC members, he said.

With prices having lost some $35/b of their value since mid-June, producer countries that are heavily dependent on crude export revenues have taken a major hit. I cant talk about a number that the price should go back to, Zanganeh said. But at the moment, it can be said that almost nobody among the producers finds these conditions favorable, he said. He added that Iran and other market experts agreed that the market was currently oversupplied and it would continue to be oversupplied in 2015. Next year we will have more oversupply, he said.

By IRNA

 

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