Saudi campaigns for Gulf Arab oil output cuts
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DUBAI (June 7, 1998 4:08 p.m. EDT nando.net) - Saudi Oil Minister Ali Naimi toured key Gulf Arab states on Sunday to drum up support for a round of oil production cuts aimed at boosting world oil prices.
Naimi visited Qatar, Oman and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and a non-Saudi OPEC source said he was due to travel to Kuwait though Kuwait airport officials said he had not arrived in the Gulf Arab state.
Naimi's tour has secured a pledge by OPEC member Qatar to cut its production by 20,000 barrels per day from July 1, while Oman expressed strong support but fell short of announcing a commitment.
The UAE confirmed the visit but gave no details of Naimi's meeting with his counterpart and OPEC President Obeid bin Saif al-Nasseri.
Nasseri said earlier he was not happy with current oil oil prices and that intervention might be needed if prices stayed low.
Saudi Arabia has called on other oil producers in addition to the backers of Amsterdam deal it reached on Thursday with Mexico and Venezuela, to shave production in a move to lift oil prices, now at their lowest level in real terms in a quarter of a century.
"We will cut our oil production by another 20,000 bpd from the first of July," Qatar Oil Minister Abdullah bin Hamad al-Attiyah told reporters after seeing off the Saudi Oil Minister.
The moves follow a first round of cuts from April 1 which saw some 15 producers inside and outside OPEC agree to cut around 1.5 million bpd. Qatar sliced 30,000 bpd.
"The cut is in support of the agreement reached in Amsterdam and Riyadh between Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Mexico," Attiyah said.
Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Mexico agreed after secret talks in Amsterdam last Thursday to cut 450,000 bpd from their current production.
Saudi Arabia, the world's largest producer and exporter, said it would slash 225,000 bpd, Venezuela 125,000 bpd and Mexico 100,000 bpd from July 1.
Omani Oil Minister Mohammad bin Hamad bin Seif al-Ramhi told Reuters his country supported the initiative of the three countries in Amsterdam and was seriously reviewing the issue.
"No decision has been made one way or the other. In principle Oman has always supported stability of oil prices," Ramhi said by telephone from Muscat.
"We are looking into how the whole thing will develop ... If there is added value in production cuts, we will consider it. We will wait to see what happens with the others," he said.
Oman, a major Gulf Arab oil producer but not a member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, is regarded as a critical barometer of whether producers are willing to swallow deeper output cuts in the hope of higher prices.
Oman earlier this year pledged to cut its own output by 30,000 bpd as part of the Riyadh Pact in March.
Norway, the world's second largest oil exporter after Saudi Arabia, has said it is not considering any further output cuts though Iran has said it was willing to consider reducing flows as part of a collective effort.
Kuwaiti Oil Minister Sheikh Saud Nasser al-Sabah on Saturday was reported as saying Kuwait might consider further output cuts after the GCC meeting.
Influential oil producers in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) -- Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Qatar and non-OPEC states Bahrain and Oman -- are scheduled to meet in Riyadh on June 16 to discuss a concerted move to prop up prices.
World oil prices have remained soft despite cuts because of brimming storage tanks. North Sea Brent crude futures for July delivery closed on Friday at $14.60 a barrel, compared to an average price in 1997 of $19.10.
OPEC oil ministers are scheduled to meet in Vienna on June 24 to discuss further cuts in addition to the pledges made by Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Mexico in Amsterdam.
By YOUSSEF KASSEM, Reuters
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