The price of oil has partially rebounded and is hovering around US$50 per barrel having hit a 10-year low of less than US$30 in January ©Karim Sahib (AFP) |
Saudi Oil Minister Khalid
al-Falih said on Sunday that the current cycle of falling crude prices is close
to an end as market fundamentals improve.
AFP
report continues:
Oil
prices are currently hovering at around US$50 per barrel after hitting a
10-year low of less than US$30 in January, down from a peak of more than US$100
in mid-2014.
"The
current down cycle is nearing an end," Falih told a joint press conference
with his Russian counterpart Alexander Novak on Sunday after a Gulf ministerial
meeting in Riyadh.
"Market
fundamentals, in terms of supply and demand, have begun to improve," Falih
said, adding: "We are optimistic that oil prices will continue to improve
in the future."
Qatar's
energy minister, Mohammed al-Sada, whose country holds the rotating presidency
of the OPEC oil exporting cartel, also said the "difficult phase is
over".
"Although
the market is heading to being balanced, it needs our joint effort, and we all
agreed that we need to take measures to bring back this balance," he said.
Novak
said he and his Gulf counterparts had discussed ways to "develop the best
mechanism to solve the issue of stabilization".
"We
have reached an unprecedented level in our relations and cooperation" with
Saudi Arabia, he told reporters, adding that he agreed with Falih "to
continue to work and remain in continuous contact to achieve... concrete
mechanisms".
OPEC
has invited Russia and key non-members to a meeting later this month as the
cartel and Moscow seek to tighten cooperation to boost historically low crude
prices.
The
invitation was announced after a meeting between top OPEC energy ministers and
Novak in Istanbul, aimed at advancing joint efforts to bolster oil prices whose
lows have hurt the highly dependent economies of crude producers.
The
cartel and Russia will meet on Monday, ahead of the OPEC technical meeting in
Vienna on October 28-29, to which Russia and others have been invited.
Last
month at a meeting in Algiers, the cartel agreed its first production cut in
eight years, although it remains to be seen how this will be complied with and
implemented.
President
Nicolas Maduro of OPEC member Venezuela was in Riyadh Sunday for talks a day
after calling in Iran for increased cooperation between oil-rich nations to stabilize
prices.
Maduro, who is also due to visit Qatar on a Middle East tour, currently faces an economic and political crisis at home, compounded by the collapsing price of oil.
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