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Iran says will not join deal to freeze oil output

Iran’s Petroleum Minister Bijan Zangeneh says the country has no intention to forge an agreement with other producers to freeze its oil output at current levels.

Iran says it has no intention to forge an agreement with other major crude producers to freeze its oil output at current levels. 

Iran’s Petroleum Minister Bijan Zangeneh told Bloomberg that the country is still determined to raise its crude production to pre-sanctions level of 4 million barrels a day. 

Zangeneh emphasized that the Wednesday meeting between member states of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) should focus on consultations on market issues. He added that the group could only reach a formal supply deal at its November meeting in Vienna.

“It’s not our agenda to reach agreement in these two days,” Zanganeh said. “We are here for the IEF and to have a consultative informal meeting in OPEC to exchange views. Not more.”

The Iranian minister talked to Bloomberg on the sidelines of the International Energy Forum in the Algerian capital. 

On Wednesday, OPEC and non-OPEC producers will meet in Algiers to discuss the latest market conditions. Top on the agenda of the meeting will be a proposal by Saudi Arabia for producers to keep their oil output at January levels – what Riyadh believes will help stabilize the prices in markets.

Iran has so far rejected the call to freeze its output as unfair and emphasized that it will go ahead with its plans to increase its oil production.

Nevertheless, it had made it clear that it is ready to join the plan after its output reaches 4 million barrels per day.

Bloomberg emphasized that Iran – which it described as less dependent on oil revenues than Persian Gulf producers like Saudi Arabia – has seen its prospects boosted as a result of the removal of the sanctions.

In Saudi Arabia, tentative moves toward economic reform have not prevented two years of weak prices causing financial havoc, it added.

Saudi Arabia, Bloomberg said, is burning through foreign-exchange reserves, government contractors have gone unpaid and civil servants will get no bonus this year.

The rising stakes of low oil prices appear to have already increased pressures on Riyadh. Reuters reported on Friday that Saudi Arabia has informed Tehran that it is ready to reduce its oil output provided that Iran agrees to cap its own output at its current level of 3.6 million barrels per day over the remaining months to the end of 2016. Tehran has reportedly already rejected the Saudi proposal. 


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