Oil plummets 6% as Saudis say crude production fully restored

NEW YORK — Oil prices dropped about 6 per cent on Tuesday after Saudi Arabia’s energy minister said the kingdom has fully restored its oil production hit by an attack this weekend that shut 5 per cent of global oil output.

Saturday’s attacks raised the spectre of a major supply shock in a market that in recent months has been preoccupied with demand concerns and faltering global growth. Oil surged as much as 20 per cent at one point on Monday.

During a news conference on Tuesday, Saudi Arabia’s energy minister also said it will keep its full oil supply to its customers this month.

Production could be fully online within two to three weeks and the kingdom was close to restoring 70 per cent of the 5.7 million barrels per day lost after the attacks, a top Saudi source briefed on the latest developments told Reuters.

Brent crude futures fell US$4.12, or 6 per cent, to US$64.90 a barrel by 2:17 p.m. EDT (1817 GMT). U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures fell US$3.52, or 5.6 per cent, to US$59.38 a barrel.
Brent sank more than 7 per cent during the news conference.

In the immediate fallout from the attacks, state-owned producer Saudi Aramco told some Asian refiners it would meet its oil commitments, albeit with changes, sources said.

The attacks on crude-processing facilities at Abqaiq and Khurais resulted in the largest single supply disruption in half a century, and threw into question Saudi Arabia’s status as supplier of last resort.
The prospect of releases from strategic oil reserves in the United States, and other industrialized countries that the International Energy Agency advises, such as Japan, have weighed on prices, but the geopolitical threat of retaliation is causing concerns.

© Thomson Reuters 2019

Reopening Canada: For once there’s plenty of room in picturesque towns devastated by the loss of international tourists

Reopening Canada: ‘Faster, cleaner’ experience could include facial scans so passengers can glide through airports in less time

The Nordic nation had said it was too tied to oil and gas, and was concerned for the environment, so needed to diversify. However, it is amping up again

Instead, there should be incentives for needed ‘risk’ capital and the formation of companies

You can read more of the news on source

Related posts