The
price of oil has nose-dived from all-time highs of US$100 a barrel in mid-2014
©Spencer Platt (Getty/AFP)
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The world's two biggest
oil producers Saudi Arabia and Russia said Monday they had agreed to "act
together" to try to stabilize oil prices, but failed to make headway on a
production freeze.
AFP
report continues:
The
two nations "noted the particular importance of constructive dialogue and
close cooperation between the largest oil-producing countries."
This
should have "the goal of supporting the stability of the oil market and
ensuring a stable level of investment in the long term," the energy
ministers from both countries said.
Their
comments came in a joint statement after a meeting at the G20 summit in China.
"To
this end the ministers agreed to act together or in cooperation with other oil
producers," the statement said, adding they had agreed to set up a
"joint monitoring group" to offer recommendations aimed at preventing
price fluctuations.
Russia's
Energy Minister Alexander Novak described the announcement as marking a
"new era" in cooperation between Russia and Saudi Arabia and insisted
it would have a "critical significance" for oil markets, news agency
Interfax reported.
But
there were no details on any agreement to freeze oil output, just weeks before
Moscow and OPEC meet in Algeria to discuss the crisis.
The
globe's major oil producers have been unable to strike a deal on freezing
output, due mainly to a dispute between fierce regional rivals Saudi Arabia and
Iran over Tehran's desire to raise production levels after the lifting of
sanctions.
Novak
said Moscow and Riyadh were discussing "concrete parameters" to halt
price fluctuations but repeated that Iran should be allowed to return its
output to pre-sanction levels.
But
Saudi Energy Minister Khaled al-Falih told Al-Arabiya television channel there
was "currently no need to freeze production" after meeting Novak.
"A
freeze is one of the preferred options but it is not needed for the
moment," he said.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin met Saudi Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on
the sidelines of the G20 on Sunday and said they would work to address a global
glut and overproduction that has hammered prices for the past two years.
In
an interview ahead of the meeting Putin -- whose economy slumped into recession
on the back of oil price falls -- said that a freeze was "the right
decision" and called for "compromise".
The oil market has been plagued by a stubborn supply glut that saw prices plunge to near 13-year lows below US$30 at the start of 2016. While it has recovered recently, it is still well off highs above US$100 seen in mid-2014.
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