Oil rises as reality dawns over Venezuela's export crisis

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Cooper

Brent crude futures were up 23 cents at $75.59 a barrel by 0900 GMT, while U.S. Intermediate (WTI) crude was 14 cents higher at $64.87 a barrel.

Venezuela, which faces the threat of U.S. sanctions and is in the midst of an economic crisis, is nearly a month behind delivering crude to customers from its main export terminals, according to shipping data, and chronic delays and production declines could breach state-run PDVSA's supply contracts if backlogs are not cleared soon.

Tankers waiting to load more than 24 million barrels of crude, almost as much as state shipped in April, are sitting off the OPEC member's main port, according to shipping data.

"Troubles over supply from come at a time when OPEC is considering easing supply cuts which have been in place since 2017 and were implemented to support the price," head of research Jasper Lawler said.

"The big question for oil is whether or not OPEC decides to ease the production cuts, with the meeting still some two weeks away, could be in for an increased bout of volatility."

Venezuela's supply problems have materialised while the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has voluntarily cut output since 2017 to help bring global output in line with demand.

The group, led by Saudi Arabia, has complied with its commitment to limit production, but not every member has cut voluntarily. Aside from Venezuela, has also seen output decline rapidly from its ageing fields.

The group meets in Vienna, together with top non-OPEC Russia, on June 22 to discuss its supply policy.

OPEC-member said on Wednesday a production increase was not on the table.

This followed an unofficial request from the asking OPEC's effective to boost output.

Outside OPEC, however, crude output continues to rise, especially in the United States, which is fast closing in on Russia's position as the world's largest producer, as supply approaches 11 million bpd.

U.S. crude inventories rose by 2.1 million barrels in the week to June 1, to 436.6 million barrels, the said on Wednesday.

Surging U.S. production has pushed the discount of WTI futures to Brent to more than $10 a barrel.

(Additional reporting by and in Beijing; Editing by Susan Fenton)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, June 07 2018. 15:14 IST