Oil prices rise as Kuwaiti strike continues

Oil prices rise as Kuwaiti strike continues
Updated 19 April 2016
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Oil prices rise as Kuwaiti strike continues

Oil prices rise as Kuwaiti strike continues

LONDON: Oil prices rose on Tuesday as a strike by oil workers in Kuwait nearly halved crude production from the OPEC member, overshadowing bearish sentiment following Sunday's failure by producers to agree to freeze output levels.
Thousands of Kuwaiti oil workers downed tools for a third day on Tuesday to protest against planned public sector pay reform, cutting crude output to 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd), according to an oil spokesman cited by news agency KUNA.
That is little more than half of Kuwait's average output of 2.8 million bpd in March.
"The Kuwaiti strike is supporting prices," said Tamas Varga, oil analyst at London brokerage PVM Oil Associates.
Brent crude futures, the global benchmark, traded at $43.34 a barrel at 1327 GMT, 43 cents above Monday's close. US crude futures were up 31 cents at $40.09 a barrel.
However, analysts said Kuwait's disruption would likely be brief and investors would soon focus back on the market's oversupply given the failure of major exporters on Sunday to agree to freeze output to avoid worsening the glut.
"In the coming days oil production is likely to partially recover from its initial drop as non-striking staff are redistributed and inventories drawn upon, avoiding a force majeure on loadings," policy risk consultancy Eurasia Group said.
Iran has repeatedly said it would prioritise regaining pre-sanctions crude output levels over discussing an output freeze.
Iran's Deputy Oil Minister Rokneddin Javadi said on Tuesday crude production would reach that level by the end of the Iranian month of Khordad, which falls on June 20, according to state news agency IRNA.
The country's crude oil exports have risen to around 1.75 million bpd so far in April, according to an industry source and shipping data. Exports averaged about 1.6 million bpd in March.
Other exporters who participated in the Doha talks have already shifted attention back to their own interests.
Russia's Deputy Energy Minister Kirill Molodtsov said on Tuesday the country was considering raising oil production this year, possibly targeting a level of 540 million tonnes of crude. Russia produced 534 million tonnes last year.
An executive at Russia's number two oil producer Lukoil disagreed, saying production would fall this year unless the government changed the tax regime. He also said Russia should return to the negotiation table to find an output freeze agreement that will prop up prices.
OPEC member Venezuela said it hoped to raise oil exports this year to 2.3 million bpd.
Additional barrels threaten to boost a global supply glut that has brought prices to multi-year lows as 1-2 million barrels of crude are pumped every day in excess of demand.