Ƶ

Oil Updates — OPEC’s World Oil Outlook to be launched at ADIPEC; Crude eases

Update Oil Updates — OPEC’s World Oil Outlook to be launched at ADIPEC; Crude eases
Brent futures fell $1.19, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $95.77 a barrel. US West Texas Intermediate crude fell $1.18, or 1.3 percent, to $87.90. (Shutterstock)
Short Url
Updated 30 October 2022

Oil Updates — OPEC’s World Oil Outlook to be launched at ADIPEC; Crude eases

Oil Updates — OPEC’s World Oil Outlook to be launched at ADIPEC; Crude eases

RIYADH: The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries is set to realse its World Oil Outlook at the Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference on Oct. 31, news agency WAM reported.

Haitham Al Ghais, OPEC’s secretary general along with other top OPEC officials will present the findings in the WOO, and will also introduce a video with key messages from the publication’s 16th edition.

“The WOO is an indispensable reference tool that underscores the Organization’s commitment to impartial analysis, data transparency and the enhancement of dialogue and cooperation,” said Al-Ghais.

He added: “This is extremely valuable given events in 2022, and the challenges and opportunities the energy industry will face in the years and decades ahead.”

Initially published in 2007, WOO provides an in-depth review and analysis of the global oil and energy industries, along with offering insights into the upstream and downstream, supply and demand, investments, the impact of policies, and issues related to environment and sustainable development, with experts’ comments and analysis.

Crude eases

Oil prices eased about 1 percent on Friday after top crude importer China widened its COVID-19 curbs, though the crude benchmarks were poised for a weekly gain on supply concerns and surprisingly strong economic data.

Brent futures fell $1.19, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $95.77 a barrel. US West Texas Intermediate crude fell $1.18, or 1.3 percent, to $87.90.

For the week, Brent rose about 2 percent and WTI was up about 3 percent.

Nigeria planning auction for seven deep offshore oil blocks

Nigeria is planning to auction seven deep offshore oil blocks, 15 years since the last ones were auctioned, the upstream regulator said on Saturday.

Apart from marginal fields, Nigeria last conducted bidding for 45 oil blocks in 2007 even when the court had stopped the sale of two that were under litigation between Shell and the Nigerian government.

“We will announce by next month the intention to conduct transparent bidding rounds for seven oil blocks,” Gbenga Komolafe, CEO of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority, told Reuters.

“All the blocks are in the Lagos waters, not in the Niger Delta with the added advantage of its proximity to the export-free zone in Lagos,” he said.

In 2005, then President Olusegun Obasanjo launched an open auction process and said Nigeria would no longer award lucrative drilling licenses on a discretionary basis.

However, the auctions drew criticism that they were neither as transparent as they should be nor as successful in terms of securing investment in Nigeria.

Ecuador’s state oil company agrees to spot sale with PetroChina

Ecuador’s state-owned oil company said on Friday it has agreed to a new spot sale for 720,000 barrels of Oriente crude to Chinese oil company Petrochina International Co. Ltd.

The crude will be shipped in two cargos of 360,000 barrels each, Petroecuador said in a statement, adding it expects the shipments to be loaded in November.

The sale will generate an extra $55.8 million for the Ecuadorian state, the company said.

In September, Petroecuador said it reached an agreement with Petrochina International, a subsidiary of PetroChina Co. Ltd., as part of a renegotiation of long-term contracts between the two companies.

Petroecuador began negotiations with the Chinese oil firm last April in order to improve the price formula for Ecuadorian crude and the extension of the delivery schedule for shipments, which was set to expire in 2024.

Both state oil companies signed three complementary contracts on Sept. 9 to update crude delivery conditions, the same ones that are in force.

(With input from Reuters)