OPEC+ delayed the revival of its oil production by three months, a delegate said, the third time it’s deferred the move while crude prices struggle amid a looming surplus.
The group led by Saudi Arabia and Russia pushed back the series of supply increases, which had been due to begin with a hike of 180,000 barrels a day in January. It will instead start in April and unwind the cuts at a slower place than previously planned, finishing the process in September 2026, according to the delegate who asked not to be named because the information is not public.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners had first announced in June that they would restore output halted since 2022, reviving 2.2 million barrels per day in monthly tranches. But its plans have been thwarted as oil demand falters in top consumer China, while supplies boom from the US, Brazil and Canada. Global markets face a surplus in 2025 even if Opec+ does not add a single barrel, according to the International Energy Agency.
Oil prices have declined about 18 per cent since early July as traders shrugged off turmoil in Middle East and focus instead the slowdown in China, which has grappled with a range of economic challenges. Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase . have predicted that crude will keep sliding into the US$60s next year, even if Opec+ continues to restrain production.
That poses a financial threat for many members including the Saudis, who have already been forced to cut spending on lavish economic transformation plans. Their oil-market ally, Russian President Vladimir Putin, seeks revenue to continue waging war on Ukraine.
Pausing the supply restart also gives Opec+ some time to assess the impact of President-Elect Donald Trump’s return to the White House. He has signalled he could renew the campaign of “maximum pressure” on crude exports from Iran, deployed during his first term to curtail Tehran’s nuclear programme. Squeezing the Islamic Republic’s oil sales could leave a gap for its Middle East adversaries to fill.
On the other hand, Trump has also warned of punitive trade tariffs on several countries including China, which could deliver a fresh blow to Beijing’s economic activity and fuel consumption. BLOOMBERG
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