Iraq oil minister says crude price ‘fair,’ aims to hike output capacity

An employee checks pipelines at the Bai Hassan oil field west of Kirkuk in Iraq, on October 19, 2017. (AFP)
  • ‘We will do our best to stabilize the market’
  • ‘We will look after our country as a first priority but will not put aside the interests of the consumers’

BAGHDAD: Iraq’s new oil minister Thamer Ghadhban said on Wednesday the current price of crude was “fair,” and that OPEC’s second-largest producer would be responsible in providing ample oil supplies to the market.
Ghadhban also said the oil ministry aimed to increase output capacity and will support foreign energy companies by helping them overcome any bureaucratic hurdles.
“We will do our best to stabilize the market,” Ghadhban told reporters after officially taking over the oil portfolio from Jabar Al-Luaibi.
“The oil price at the moment is at a fair price,” he said in response to a question about an upcoming OPEC meeting in December.
“It’s not too high, it’s not 100 dollars per barrel and it’s not 30 dollars.
“We will look after our country as a first priority but will not put aside the interests of the consumers.”
Oil prices rose on Wednesday, with benchmark Brent crude up 35 cents at $76.26 a barrel by 1115 GMT. The contract fell 1.8 percent on Tuesday, at one point touching its lowest since Aug. 24 at $75.09. US light crude was 25 cents up at $66.43. It hit a two-month low of $65.33 a barrel on Tuesday.
Ghadhban, who was nominated by Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi and confirmed as minister in a parliamentary vote last week, said he would look at ways to reform the oil ministry, including by eliminating nepotism.
The new minister replaced Jabar Al-Luaibi, who had held the oil portfolio since 2016 in the government of former Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi.
At a ceremony officially transferring the oil portfolio to Ghadhban, the new minister said he would seek to develop oil refineries by increasing their production capacity and reducing gas flaring.
Iraq has continued to flare some of the gas extracted alongside oil at its fields because it lacks the facilities to process it into fuel. Iraq has said it hopes to end gas flaring by 2021.
Iraq is OPEC’s second-largest producer after Ƶ and pumps around 4.6 million bpd. The majority of its crude exports go to Asia.
The bulk of Iraq’s oil is exported via its southern terminals, which account for more than 95 percent of the OPEC producer’s state revenue.
Iraq’s southern oil exports averaged 3.488 million barrels per day (bpd) in October, two oil executives told Reuters on Wednesday.
Exports were down from the September average of 3.560 million bpd owing to bad weather, which slowed shipments on some days, the executives said.
Iraq is seeking to increase crude production capacity to 7 million bpd by 2022 from 5 million bpd now.
Ghadhban said Iraq also planned to increase exploration, especially in its western desert and along border areas.