Following an unexpected announcement by OPEC+ producers to cut output, oil prices have surged. The global benchmark, Brent crude, had a 5.31% increase in cost, rising to $84.13 a barrel. The U.S. benchmark, WTI, surged to $79.83 a barrel, a 5.48% increase.
In total, cutbacks in production will be over one million barrels a day as a “precautionary measure aimed at supporting the stability of the oil market,” says one Saudi energy ministry official (opens in new tab), according to Al Jazeera. Cutbacks include 500,000 barrels a day cut by Saudi Arabia, 211,000 barrels a day cut by Iraq, 144,000 barrels cut by the United Arab Emirates and 128,000 barrels cut by Kuwait. Additionally, Russia’s cut of half a million barrels per day would extend through the end of the year.
The White House reacted negatively to these cuts, with one spokesperson for the National Security Council stating, according to CNN (opens in new tab), “We don’t think cuts are advisable at this moment given market uncertainty — and we’ve made that clear. We’re focused on prices for American consumers, not barrels.”
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This rise in oil prices could cause inflation to remain higher for longer, complicating the Fed’s efforts to curb inflation, which they’ve been doing by continuously raising interest rates since March 2022. It will also further complicate ties between Saudi Arabia and the United States, as the U.S. has been appealing for increased oil output in order to lower energy prices.
Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, a Gulf expert at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, stated, according to PBS, that (opens in new tab) “domestic interest takes precedence in Saudi decision-making over relationships with international partners and is likely to remain a point of friction in U.S.-Saudi relations for the foreseeable future.”
OPEC, or the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, is a group of 13 major-oil exporting nations with the goal of regulating global oil prices through reductions and increases in production. In 2016, OPEC organized with 10 non-OPEC oil-producing countries to form OPEC+. At the end of 2021, OPEC Member Countries held 80.4% (1,241.82 billion barrels) of the world’s crude oil reserves.
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