VIENNA: Saudi Arabia, Russia and six other key Opec+ members announced on Saturday a huge increase in crude production for July.
They will produce an additional 411,000 barrels a day – the same target set for May and then June – according to a statement, which is more than three times greater than the group had previously planned.
In recent years the 22-nation group had agreed to daily reductions of 2.2 million barrels with the aim of boosting prices.
But in early 2025, leading members of the group known as the “Voluntary Eight”, or V8, decided on the gradual output increase and subsequently began to accelerate the pace.
The moves have resulted in oil prices plummeting to around $60 per barrel, the lowest level in four years.
Opec+ “struck three times: (the output target for) May was a warning, June a confirmation and July a warning shot”, Rystad Energy analyst Jorge Leon told AFP.
“The scale of the production increase reflects more than just internal supply dynamics,” he said. “This is a strategic adjustment with geopolitical aims: Saudi Arabia seems to be bowing to Donald Trump’s requests.”
Shortly after taking office, the US president called on Riyadh to ramp up production to bring down oil prices.
Saturday’s decision comes after a meeting of all Opec ministers on Wednesday, where the alliance’s collective production policy was reaffirmed.
The decision is officially justified by “healthy market fundamentals” covering oil reserves and structural demand growth during coming months.
But markets have met this view with scepticism amid concerns about demand and a trade war launched by the United States.
Analysts see several possible motivations for the production hikes, one of them being Saudi Arabia and others penalising members for not keeping to their quotas under the cuts first agreed in 2022.
Published in Dawn, June 1st, 2025