Bloomberg -- good analysis of OPEC+ and UAE squabble ...............................................
  July 2, 2021
  OPEC+ Is Pushed to the Brink Again
  The UAE’s call for a higher quota needs to be addressed or it will just resurface again and again.
  By Julian Lee 
  Julian  Lee is an oil strategist for Bloomberg First Word. Previously he worked  as a senior analyst at the Centre for Global Energy Studies.
  At loggerheads once more
  It  all seemed to be going so well and then, suddenly, it wasn’t. The OPEC+  group of oil producers is facing an existential crisis, as key member  the United Arab Emirates again demands a higher production target for itself and Saudi Arabia digs in its heels.
  On  Thursday, it appeared the bones of an output deal covering the rest of  2021 had come together. It just needed full ratification from the  alliance’s oil ministers, who have been working tirelessly to adjust the  targets for months now.
  Producers would add 2 million barrels a  day to oil supplies between August and December at a rate of 400,000  barrels a day each month. That’s less than the market wants, but ought  to keep oil prices from spiking as economies reopen. Worried about the  outlook for supply and demand next year, the group would also extend its  output deal through the end of next year, rather than letting it expire  as planned at the end of April.
  The problem is, the mooted  agreement seems to have been cobbled together by Saudi Arabia and Russia  with little other input. That proved too much for the UAE, the OPEC+  group’s fourth-biggest producer. The Persian Gulf country has chafed  under an output target that it feels is unduly restrictive when compared  to other members. It’s time the alliance find a sustainable solution to  the UAE’s demands, because they clearly aren’t going away. The future  of the alliance depends on it.
  The problem lies in the  starting points adopted as a baseline for the cuts agreed in April 2020.  They were (loosely) tied to 2018 production levels, with some  exceptions -- most notably for Russia, which got a baseline some 600,000  barrels a day above its maximum production level.
  At that time,  the UAE was in a phase of rapid expansion, with new projects raising its  crude production capacity from around 3 million barrels a day to near 4  million barrels. As a result, it is now sitting on more idle capacity  than any other member, measured in percentage terms.
  This  isn’t the first time the UAE has balked at its contribution to the  OPEC+ cuts. It raised exactly the same grievance late last year, even  hinting it might reconsider its membership in the Organization of  Petroleum Exporting Countries.
  The UAE feels aggrieved that  it is making deeper cuts than everyone else, a complaint it supports by  comparing the country’s output target with its production in April  2020, the month the deal was hammered out.
  The UAE was  placated last time around with a renewed drive to get countries that  hadn’t complied fully with their output promises to make deeper  compensatory cuts. Although pledges were made, little has actually been  delivered by the laggards and the biggest over-producer, Russia, hasn’t  even been asked to contribute.
  By failing to deal with the underlying issue, it’s arisen again. Finding a resolution won’t be easy.
  Under the new quota it’s seeking, the UAE wants to be able to boost its output by almost 700,000 barrels a day.
  It’s  hard to see Saudi Arabia agreeing to that. It was already reluctant to  raise production targets for the rest of this year going into this  week’s meeting. Its price for agreeing to support that policy --  championed by Russia -- was to extend their cooperation through the  whole of 2022. 
  That’s when it appears the UAE refused to support  the extension without being granted a higher starting point for its own  contribution. Saudi Arabia seems to be saying that it won’t support  output increases for the rest of 2021 without the extension. It’s a  catch-22.
  Revising baselines isn’t easy, but it has been done  before. Iran secured a new quota for itself in 1998, but for most of the  1990s and until 2006 any changes to the OPEC output quotas were simply  applied on a pro-rata basis to existing individual targets.
  If  neither Saudi Arabia nor the UAE budges, the current targets will stay  in place until April next year -- assuming the OPEC+ coalition itself  survives. With oil demand forecast to rise strongly in the second half  of 2021, that would send oil prices soaring, stoking inflation.
  If  the coalition falls apart, the entire deal could collapse -- and most  likely oil prices with it. Last time we were in that situation, Saudi  Arabia boosted production to 11.6 million barrels a day, sending oil  into a slump that eventually saw WTI crude trading at negative prices.
  Of  course, the UAE could always back down, accept its target and then just  pump what it wants. That’s the traditional OPEC way of doing things.  But when it did that last summer its oil minister was hauled to Riyadh  for a public dressing down. It wasn’t pretty and has probably only  served to stoke tensions.
  Resolving this issue in a way  that prevents it from resurfacing in another six months will require  cool heads. In the 100-degree heat of the Persian Gulf summer, they may  be hard to find.
  © 2021 Bloomberg L.P. 
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