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Platts Survey: OPEC pumps 31.28M barrels of crude per day in June; highest since Aug 2012

Oil production from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) totaled 31.28 million barrels per day (b/d) in June, up 170,000 b/d from May and the fourth consecutive monthly increase since February, as Saudi Arabia and Iraq pushed out more oil, a Platts survey of OPEC and oil industry officials and analysts showed Monday. The June total leaves OPEC pumping nearly 1.3 million b/d in excess of its official 30 million b/d ceiling.

This is the highest monthly level since August 2012, when the survey estimated output at 31.54 million b/d. At that point, output was on the way down. Now, output seems to be on the way up, and at a time when the market could be looking at a lot more oil from Iran.

—Margaret McQuaile, senior correspondent for Platts

  • Top producer, Saudi Arabia, driver of the oil producer group’s current market share strategy, further increased its output to produce an average 10.35 million b/d in June. A spike in air-conditioning demand has traditionally boosted the volume of crude burned directly in the kingdom’s power plants during the summer months. In addition, new refineries are pushing domestic use of crude oil higher

    Top producer, Saudi Arabia, driver of the oil producer group’s current market share strategy, further increased its output to produce an average 10.35 million b/d in June. A spike in air-conditioning demand has traditionally boosted the volume of crude burned directly in the kingdom’s power plants during the summer months. In addition, new refineries are pushing domestic use of crude oil higher.

    Iraq pushed volumes from its Gulf terminals up by nearly 330,000 b/d to more than 3 million b/d following the commissioning at the beginning of the month of a new storage and pumping system at the onshore Fao terminal. As well as Basrah Light, Iraq is now exporting the newly-introduced Basrah Heavy crude oil.

    But volumes exported from Turkish Mediterranean port Ceyhan via the pipeline system of semi-autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan fell by more than half from May levels, raising a question mark over the future of an oil export agreement signed by Baghdad and Erbil late last year.

    Last Thursday, the Kurdistan Regional Government said it had been forced to boost the sale of its own crude to international markets last month because of a debt backlog triggered by federal government budget cuts, leaving less crude available for export from Ceyhan on behalf of Iraqi state oil marketer SOMO.

    In Libya, output slipped by 20,000 b/d to 410,000 b/d as it continued to struggle to raise production due to ongoing security issues and technical limitations.

    However, the state-owned national oil company is optimistic it can raise output in the near term following the lifting of force majeure at the major Ras Lanuf export facility and a tentative agreement with tribal leaders in western Libya to reopen the pipeline linking the major fields of Sharara and Elephant (El Feel) to ports on the country’s western Mediterranean coast.

    OPEC said after its 5 June agreement that members had been urged to adhere to the 30 million b/d ceiling. There is, however, no mechanism in place to enforce any level of adherence as no individual country quotas have been distributed under the ceiling.

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