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KUWAIT (Bloomberg) -- Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest crude exporter, said OPEC doesn’t need to meet on possible measures to check falling oil prices, according to the kingdom’s oil minister Ali Al-Naimi.
Prices “always fluctuate and this is normal,” Naimi told reporters in Kuwait where he’s meeting counterparts from the Gulf Cooperation Council comprising six Arab oil-producing monarchies. Four of them -- Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar -- are members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
OPEC is coming under pressure to pump less crude as increased output from U.S. shale deposits is pushing prices to a 16-month low, according to a Citigroup report Sept. 8. Saudi Arabia cut its production by 408 Mbpd in August, to 9.6 MMbbl, according to its submission to OPEC’s monthly oil market report published yesterday.
Brent, the benchmark for more than half the world’s crude, fell under $100/bbl on Sept. 9 and was trading on September 11 at $97.56/bbl at 9:44 a.m. in London.
“It’s too early now,” Naimi said in response to a question about whether OPEC would convene before its next scheduled meeting on Nov. 27. “We will discuss the prices and the production level when in our next group meeting.”
Saudi Arabia’s output reduction came as other OPEC members such as Nigeria and Kuwait said they increased output, according to the group’s oil market report. Total production by the organization’s 12 members climbed by 231 Mbpd to 30.347 MMbbl last month, based on secondary sources, the report showed.
OPEC, which supplies 40% of the world’s oil, reaffirmed its output target at 30.0 MMbpd when it last met in June.