'Saudi Arabia crude output near record'


(MENAFN- Gulf Times) Saudi Arabia's oil minister Ali al-Naimi says Saudi Arabia is producing near record levels of crude in April, underscoring the kingdom's willingness to defend market share at a time when oil markets have staged a fragile recovery.

There are worries among some producers that growing output from Saudi Arabia and other members of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) could snuff out a recent rebound in oil prices, particularly with economic growth in key consumer China the slowest in six years in the first quarter.

Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries had said its overall output surged to 30.79mn barrels per day in March, up 810,000 bpd from the previous month, with demand higher than expected due to lower prices. Naimi said that oil production in Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest crude exporter, was "around 10mn" bpd in April.

"I have said many times we will always be happy to supply to our customers with what they want. Now they want 10mn," Naimi said in an interview in the South Korean capital, where he is due to attend a board meeting of the state oil firm Saudi Aramco.

Responding to the comments, benchmark Brent crude slipped from early highs to trade under $64 a barrel.

Naimi earlier this month said that Saudi Arabia produced some 10.3mn bpd of crude in March, eclipsing a previous high of 10.2mn bpd in August 2013, according to records going back to the early 1980s.

Oil prices have risen around 17% this month, pushed up by reports of a possible dip in US output, but Morgan Stanley warned on Monday that Saudi production could be more important than developments in the US.

"We worry about the market's fixation on the US ... Opec production may be more important as production increased 1mn barrels per day month-on-month in March. Saudi Arabia alone added the equivalent of half of Bakken (the largest US shale oil field) production in a matter of months - far beyond any US slowdown," the bank said in a note.

Asked about whether he was worried about Chinese oil demand with the country's economic growth slowing down, Naimi said: "We have seen no change in oil demand. We are still supplying the same volume as we have been supplying for some time."

The minister said Saudi Arabia was supplying about 1mn bpd to China, the world's biggest net oil importer, and he expected Asia's demand to grow.


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