Nigeria, Angola’s pushback against OPEC+ oil output quotas persists
OPEC+ is no closer to resolving the deadlock over oil-output quotas for some African members that has already forced the group to delay a critical meeting amid faltering prices, according to delegates.
Bloomberg reported on Tuesday that the Saudi-led alliance hasn’t been able to reach an agreement with Angola and Nigeria, which are pushing back against lower quota limits for 2024 that reflect their diminished production capabilities, delegates said, asking not to be named because the information was private. The stalemate may not be resolved before the scheduled OPEC+ meeting on Nov. 30, potentially requiring a further delay, one delegate said.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners needs to finalize output policy for 2024, with market watchers predicting that further cuts are needed as crude prices sag toward $80 a barrel on the prospect of a renewed surplus. Saudi Arabia, which has been making a voluntary output reduction of 1 million barrels a day since July, is asking other members of the coalition to reduce their quotas to share the burden of cuts.
Read: Nigeria’s crude oil production hits 20-month high
Angola and Nigeria are disputing changes to their output targets that were provisionally agreed when OPEC+ last met in June. Those new quotas were subject to a review by external consultants and both countries were unhappy with the revised figures.
Abuja is now seeking a quota of 1.58 million barrels a day for 2024, a slight increase from the provisional level, one delegate said. Luanda is proposing 1.18 million barrels a day, which is lower than the figure agreed in June but higher than the consultants’ estimate, the delegate said.
Failure to reach consensus could be very costly for the 23-nation coalition, which relies on petroleum revenue to cover government spending.