Categories: EnergyNews

UAE says OPEC+ output cut was correct decision, no politics behind it

ABU DHABI, Oct 18 (Reuters) – The United Arab Emirates believes that OPEC+ made the correct technical choice when it agreed to cut production and the unanimous decision had nothing to do with politics, energy minister Suhail al-Mazrouei said on Tuesday.

His comments came after several members of the oil producers group endorsed the steep cut to output targets agreed this month after the White House accused Saudi Arabia of coercing some other nations into supporting the move, a charge Riyadh denies.

“We fully trust and believe in the technical credibility of OPEC and OPEC+. We always meet and discuss the facts based on our analysis of the market and how we can all contribute to taking the right measures to balance the supply and demand, and that decision is always taken unanimously and the last decision was taken on the same logic,” Mazrouei told reporters.

“I would like to reiterate that there is nothing political about any decision we take in OPEC.”

Coming ahead of November mid-term elections in the United States, the move drew sharp criticism from the Biden administration which said there would be “consequences” for U.S. ties with Riyadh.

The United States has stressed that the cut would boost Russia’s foreign earnings and blunt the effectiveness of sanctions imposed over its invasion of Ukraine.

A 3D printed oil pump jack is seen in front of displayed OPEC logo in this illustration picture, April 14, 2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic

Mazrouei said the OPEC+ decision stabilised prices, rather than increasing them, adding that it was lack of stability that was driving investors away

“Prices have been stabilising and actually if you look at October 2021 before anything — before all the crises, the geopolitical ones — you would see we are in the same price environment,” the Emirati minister said.

He voiced concern that many oil producers had lost capacity due to lack of investment.

Asked if the UAE plans to ask for a higher baseline as it works to build its own capacity to 5 million barrels per day by 2030, Mazrouei said there is a mechanism for any country to raise that request.

Reporting by Maha El Dahan and Nadine Awadalla; Writing by Ghaida Ghantous; Editing by Kirsten Donovan and David Evans

Source.

World Economic Magazine

Recent Posts

Global Fashion Summit 2026, Copenhagen Sets Its Vision on Building Resilient Futures

Global Fashion Agenda has revealed Building Resilient Futures as the theme for the Global Fashion…

2 days ago

Huawei Wins Best Technology Provider Award at Electricity Connect 2025

The Electricity Connect 2025 conference in Jakarta spotlighted Indonesia’s energy transition, with Huawei recognised as…

2 days ago

3D Printed Boats Prepare to Rewrite the Future of Marine Manufacturing

After years of material science breakthroughs, a team proved that a rugged, sea-ready composite could…

3 days ago

TAHO Raises 3.5 Million Seed Round to Redefine Compute Infrastructure for the AI Era

TAHO, a Venice-based compute startup founded by ex-Meta and Google engineers, raised $3.5 million in…

5 days ago

Squirrel AI Founder Haoyang Li Spotlights Global Talent Transformation

The 9th Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh spotlighted how AI is rapidly redefining global growth,…

6 days ago

Onward Robotics Names Brendon Bielat Chief Product Officer

Onward Robotics has appointed Brendon Bielat as Chief Product Officer, strengthening its leadership team as…

7 days ago