Home Economy Russia pipeline chief says let's talk to OPEC about output

Russia pipeline chief says let's talk to OPEC about output

Russian officials have decided they should talk to Saudi Arabia and other OPEC countries about output cuts to bolster oil prices, the head of Russia’s pipeline monopoly said on Wednesday, remarks that spurred a sharp rise in prices.

Oil futures surged 5 percent after the comments by Nikolai Tokarev, head of oil pipeline monopoly Transneft, which gave the first hint of possible cooperation between the top non-OPEC oil producer and the cartel to try to reverse a record glut.

Brent crude rose $1.61 to $33.40 a barrel, a 5 percent gain, by 12:20 p.m. EST (1720 GMT), after a session low of $30.83. It was also boosted by U.S. demand following a blizzard.

But there was still a long journey from starting discussions to actual cuts by Russian oil producers, with many of them saying reducing output was technically very difficult and could lead to Russia losing market share to its competitors.

Tokarev said a meeting of oil executives and government officials in Moscow on Tuesday had reached the conclusion that talks with OPEC were needed to shore up the oil price.

“At the meeting there was discussion in particular about the oil price and what steps we should take collectively to change the situation for the better, including negotiations within the framework of OPEC as a whole, and bilaterally,” RIA news agency quoted Tokarev as saying.

“The main initiative is being shown by, of course, our Saudi partners. They are the main negotiators. That means that they are the ones we need to discuss this with first of all,” he was quoted as saying.

He said output cuts would be on the agenda for talks with OPEC countries. “Yes, that is one of the levers or mechanisms that would allow us to in some way balance the oil price,” Tokarev said.

An energy ministry representative confirmed to Reuters that possible coordination with OPEC had been discussed at the meeting, which the ministry hosted.

If discussions with OPEC begin in earnest, that would be a major reversal in Russia’s stance.

Oil prices have fallen from around $115 in the middle of 2014, causing problems for Russia’s cash-strapped budget and pushing the Russian economy into recession.

Some members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries want coordinated output cuts to push up the price, and they have been pressing Russia to play its part.

Yet oil production in Russia reached a new post-Soviet high in December of 10.80 million barrels per day, as a weak rouble helped Russian oil firms to offset falls in the price of crude.

That puts it on par with Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s biggest producer, which also pumps more than 10 million bpd.

INDUSTRY RELUCTANT Considerable obstacles to cutting production remain.

Speaking to Reuters before the meeting at the energy ministry took place, two senior officials said no groundwork had been laid for cooperating with OPEC on output.

“There are not any measures on possibly cutting production being discussed now,” said one of the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Another official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, echoed that. “It is impossible to coordinate the process and stop production in Russia,” the second source said.

A manager at a top-four Russian energy firm said coordinated cuts would not be welcomed by an industry that was fighting the possibility of declining production because of a rising tax burden and ageing fields.

“Russia has too much risk of seeing a natural decline anyway, without any agreed special steps,” the manager said, playing down the possibility of agreed action.

Another oil company source said: “We’ve heard nothing of any specific actions.” The Russian Energy Ministry declined to comment, as did Rosneft, Russia’s top oil producer. Gazprom Neft and Surgutneftegaz did not reply to Reuters requests for comment.

A spokeswoman for Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich, in charge of the energy sector, declined to comment.

Russia holds regular discussions with various countries, including oil-producing ones, on the situation on oil markets but there are no plans as of now for coordinated actions, the Kremlin’s spokesman said on Wednesday.