Bloomberg -- OPEC+ Deal Fails, Leaving Oil Market Tighter as Prices Surge ................................
  July 5, 2021 12:50 PM EDT 
  OPEC+ Deal Fails, Leaving Oil Market Tighter as Prices Surge
  Cartel unable to resolve bitter dispute between Saudis and UAE  Proposal to increase production in coming months was blocked 
  By Javier Blas, Salma El Wardany, Grant Smith, and Dina Khrennikova 
  OPEC+  abandoned its meeting without a deal, tipping the cartel into crisis  and leaving the oil market facing tight supplies and rising prices.
  Several  days of tense talks failed to resolve a bitter dispute between Saudi  Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, delegates said, asking not to be  named because the information wasn’t public. The group didn’t agree on a  date for its next meeting, according to a statement from OPEC  Secretary-General Mohammad Barkindo.
  The most immediate effect of  the breakdown is that, unless an agreement can be salvaged, the  Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies won’t  increase production for August. That will deprive the global economy of  vital extra supplies as demand recovers rapidly from the coronavirus  pandemic.
  However, the situation is fluid and the group could  reactivate talks at any moment. With prices up about 50% this year and  climbing toward $80 a barrel, the producers’ group may feel extra  pressure from consuming countries concerned about rising inflation.
  “Oil  prices will pop if no deal means current production levels continue,”  said Jason Bordoff, director of the Center on Global Energy Policy at  Columbia University. “But that’s also not tenable because a price spike  actually undermines the interests of the UAE, Russia and Saudi Arabia.”
  Brent crude jumped 1.3% to $77.12 a barrel as of 5:42 p.m. in London, the highest since 2018.
  The  outcome is a significant failure for the producers’ group. Relations  have soured between two core OPEC members to such an extent that no  compromise was possible. It damages the group’s self-image as a  responsible steward of the oil market, raising the specter of the  destructive internal price war that caused unprecedented price swings  last year.
  OPEC+ has already been reviving some of the crude  supplies it halted last year in the initial stages of the pandemic. The  23-nation coalition decided to add about 2 million barrels a day to the  market from May to July, and the question before ministers on Monday was  whether to keep going in the coming months.
  The cartel’s own  data show that once-bloated oil inventories are back down to average  levels as the recovery in fuel consumption continues. Demand in the  second half will be 5 million barrels a day higher than in the first six  months of the year, Barkindo said last week.
  Responding to these  pressures, OPEC+ was close to a deal last week to boost supply by  400,000 barrels a day each month, while also extending the expiry of its  deal from April to December 2022. At the last minute, the UAE said it  would only accept the proposal if it was granted the same terms for  calculating its quota as the Saudis.
  The UAE said throughout that  it would accept the output increase without the deal extension, but the  Saudis argued that the two elements must go together.
  The  dispute escalated over the subsequent days into an increasingly personal  and unusually public fight, with the ministers pressing their arguments  in separate TV interviews. Behind the scenes, mediation attempts by  other OPEC+ members made no progress, delegates said, and the rift was  evident in wider diplomatic tensions beyond oil.
  “Growing  differences of opinion over foreign, economic and security policies  between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi, as well as over oil policy itself, will  complicate future OPEC discussions,” said Amrita Sen at consultant  Energy Aspects Ltd. in London. “No additional oil in August, at a time  when the physical market is incredibly tight, can easily lead to prices  overshooting above $90 a barrel,”
  -- With assistance by Anthony Di Paola
  © 2021 Bloomberg L.P. 
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