• World
  • Jul 03

To offset Trump, OPEC embraces Putin

When Vladimir Putin announced at the weekend that OPEC would extend oil production cuts, broadcasting a deal before the group had even met to approve it, the move angered some member nations. They were dismayed at the leading role non-OPEC Russia - once seen as an enemy in oil markets - was playing in shaping the group’s policies.

But reality soon set in, and the acceptance that Moscow could help OPEC in its goal of propping up oil prices at a time when it is facing intensifying heat on another front: from US President Donald Trump.

Trump is putting unprecedented pressure on OPEC and its de-facto leader Saudi Arabia, demanding they pump more crude to drive down fuel prices - a key domestic issue for him as he seeks re-election next year.

Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh initially expressed outrage about the Russian president’s pre-announcement of the extended output cuts.

“OPEC is going to die with these processes,” he declared on July 1 morning, before OPEC oil ministers met to effectively rubber-stamp a done deal, bemoaning the Russia-Saudi dominance of the group’s affairs.

But by evening, he had thrown his support behind the deal: “The meeting was good for Iran and we achieved what we wanted.”

OPEC and Russia have become unlikely bedfellows, forging an OPEC+ alliance to reduce global crude supply to counter soaring output from the US and a weakening world economy.

It is a marriage of convenience as both want higher oil prices to shore up their finances, while the alliance could also strengthen OPEC’s position in the face of Trump’s demands.

“I don’t think Russia is calling the shots,” said Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih when asked if Putin was now OPEC’s boss. “I think Russia’s influence is welcome.”

Iran’s veteran OPEC governor Hossein Kazempour Ardebili concurred, echoing his boss Zanganeh’s conciliatory tone.

“Russia is a big player. If it announced something in agreement with the rest of OPEC, this is most welcome,” he said. “We are working together.”

Iraq, which has overtaken Iran as OPEC’s second-largest producer after Saudi Arabia and has taken its market share in Europe and Asia, also said Moscow’s rising role was positive.

Such a chorus of approval is a sharp reversal for relations between OPEC and Russia that have been characterised by antipathy and distrust for decades.

Back in 2001, Russia agreed to cut production in tandem with OPEC but never delivered on its pledges and instead raised output. That severely damaged relations, and other attempts at cooperation were unsuccessful - until the recent alliance.

Putin announced on June 29 that he had met Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on the sidelines of a G-20 meeting in Osaka and they had agreed to extend the OPEC+ production cuts.

Gary Ross, chief executive of Black Gold Investors, said that even if it was “indelicate” for Saudi Arabia to let Putin announce the deal, it showed the changing oil market dynamics.

“Trump has one interest - low oil prices. Putin wants higher prices,” said Ross, a veteran OPEC watcher. “Putin is vitally important for OPEC. And it is still in Russia’s best interest to cooperate with OPEC as half its budget comes from energy revenues.”

Russia needs prices of $45-50 a barrel to balance its budget and its finances are stretched by US sanctions imposed following its annexation of Crimea. Saudi Arabia needs an even higher price of $80. Benchmark Brent crude is currently in the region of $65 a barrel.

But just as the collaboration could lend Saudi Arabia some support against Trump, who has demanded Riyadh increase oil supply if it wants US military support in its stand-off with regional rival Iran, it also gives Putin more than extra revenues.

Good relations with Riyadh, an American ally, bolsters Moscow’s clout in West Asia, helps Putin’s campaign in Syria and might even help mend relations with Washington.

Highlighting those intersecting roles, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak also serves as head of several Russian government commissions on trade and cooperation including with Saudi Arabia, Iran, Turkey and Qatar.

Iran’s change in tone, in particular, illustrates the conflicting political and economic pressures it faces.

Tehran’s falling production, due to US sanctions reimposed and extended by Trump, has reduced its role within OPEC while increasing those of Saudi Arabia and non-OPEC Russia.

Iran’s exports plummeted to 0.3 million barrels per day (bpd) in June from as much as 2.5 million bpd in April 2018. But Iran is itself also looking to help from Russia, one of just a few countries that has offered to aid Tehran to counter the sanctions choking its oil trade and hammering its economy.

What is OPEC+?

* On July 2, OPEC formally signed a new charter of cooperation with major allies, including Russia. The expanded group is called OPEC+.

* OPEC+ comprises the cartel’s 14 member nations plus 10 extra crude producers: Russia, Mexico, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Brunei, Malaysia, Oman, Sudan and South Sudan.

* The deal is being seen as a sign of OPEC’s efforts to stay relevant in a market transformed by booming US shale oil output.

* Saudi Oil Minister Khalid al-Falih said market volatility meant that a new framework was needed with more producer power than OPEC alone can provide.

* The production cuts signed off on this week by OPEC and its allies had been agreed by Russia and OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia at the G-20 summit in Osaka last weekend.

* Al-Falih said the charter would allow OPEC and non-OPEC countries to establish a structure for technical meetings, ministry meetings, regular summits with the OPEC secretariat acting as the main coordinator.

Notes