OPEC, Producers to meet in Moscow, sees dramatic impact - Kachikwu.
Some members of OPEC plan to meet other oil producers in Russia around March 20 for new talks on an oil output freeze, Nigeria's petroleum minister said on Thursday, forecasting the meeting would spark a dramatic reaction in crude prices.
Nigeria has been pushing for action by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
because the slump in oil revenue has undercut its public finances and
currency, leaving the government struggling to pay civil servants.
"We're beginning to see the price of crude inch up very slowly," minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu told a conference in Abuja. "But
if the meeting that we're scheduling, it should happen in Russia,
between the OPEC and non-OPEC producers, happens about March 20, we
should see some dramatic price movement."
"Both the Saudis and the Russians, everybody is coming back to the table," Kachikwu said. "I think we're very humbled today to accept that if we get to a price of $50, it will be celebrated. That's a target that we have."
The Russian Energy Ministry said it was ready for talks but the date and venue had yet to be agreed. "Currently,
various options about the venue and date for the meeting, where
measures on oil market stabilisation due to be discussed, are being
worked out," it said in a statement.
Benchmark Brent futures were around $37 per barrel by 1554 GMT on Thursday.
OPEC
leader Saudi Arabia and non-OPEC Russia, the world's two largest oil
exporters, agreed last month to freeze output at January levels to prop
up prices if other nations agreed to join the first global oil pact in
15 years.
Yet the accord has so far failed to have
a dramatic impact on crude prices, partly because OPEC's third-largest
producer Iran plans to steeply raise production after the lifting of
international sanctions on the Islamic Republic in January.
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari on Sunday stepped up rhetoric on the issue, telling Qatar's ruler crude prices had fallen to "totally unacceptable" levels.
Kachikwu
also said Nigeria was pumping 2.2 million barrels per day, in line with
previous comments, of which 46 percent was coming from onshore fields.
He
also said Nigeria's average oil production cost from state firm NNPC
and international companies was between $13 and $15 a barrel for onshore
fields and $30 a barrel for deep offshore operations.
Oil
prices have lost two thirds of their value since mid 2014 due to a glut
of supplies caused by booming output from the United States and OPEC.
In January they fell below $30 per barrel, their lowest in more than a
decade.
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