OPEC+ countries maintain output as oil price hits nearly $80p/b

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The 13 members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other producing countries, on Tuesday decided to maintain their current output as oil price hits $79.7 per barrel.

The oil producers continued the policy of modestly boosting oil output next month, saying Omicron variant has not heavily affected demand.

The OPEC+ grouping, including top producers Saudi Arabia and Russia, has resisted US pressure for a wider opening of the taps in response to high energy prices fuelling a surge in inflation across the world.

OPEC and their 10 allies drastically slashed output in 2020 as the pandemic wreaked havoc with demand.

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Last year they decided to step it up again gradually as prices recovered, while reviewing the situation every month.

After a short videoconference meeting on Tuesday, the group said it had agreed to raise output by 400,000 barrels per day in February, the same level as in previous months.

The club’s members approved a previous hike at their December meeting despite the emergence of Omicron, which had caused prices to fall as markets fretted over its potential impact on the global economy.

The December decision earned the thanks of the White House, nervous of the effect of rising prices at American petrol stations, but it did not prevent crude prices from recovering considerably from their previous slump.

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The price of Brent, Europe’s benchmark oil contract, hit $79.76 at 1325 GMT on Tuesday — 15 percent higher than before the group’s December 2 meeting.

OPEC analysts told the group on Monday that Omicron would have a moderate impact on demand and the rise in price is expected to continue in 2022.

While the new Covid variant is spreading like wildfire around the world, it appears to be far less severe than initially feared, raising hopes that the pandemic could be overcome and life return to a little more normality.

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In remarks on Monday, OPEC Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo emphasised the need to “remain highly nimble and adaptable to the constantly changing situation”.

He said the group’s “flexible approach has helped provide an added sense of stability, reassurance and continuity to the market and investors”.

OPEC on Monday named Kuwaiti oil executive Haitham al-Ghais to succeed Barkindo on August 1.

Al-Ghais, who was Kuwait’s OPEC governor from 2017 to June 2021, is a deputy managing director of the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation (KPC).

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