Saudi
Energy Minister Khaled al-Faleh attends the 15th International Energy Forum in
Algiers on the eve of an informal OPEC meeting on September 27, 2016 ©Ryad
Kramdi (AFP)
|
Saudi Arabia's oil
minister said it was "imperative" that OPEC nations finalize an
agreement over a cut in oil production aimed at boosting crude prices, Algerian
media said Sunday.
Khalid
al-Falih met his Algerian counterpart Noureddine Boutarfa on Saturday and
called on cartel members to stick to the surprise cut deal, reached in Algiers
in September.
"In
this period marked by unstable oil prices it is imperative to reach a consensus
between OPEC nations and to agree on an effective mechanism and precise figures
to activate the historic Algiers accord," Falih was quoted as saying by
Algeria's APS news agency.
The
September meeting of OPEC members produced an agreement to cut the cartel's
output by 750,000 barrels per day (bpd), according to Bloomberg News.
Oil
rose on news of the deal, but crude prices are still more than 50 percent lower
than their mid-2014 levels.
Falih
said he was "optimistic" that the agreement would come into effect.
The
Saudi minister was quoted as saying that a "fair and balanced" output
deal would allow unrest-hit Libya and Nigeria, with a return of security, to
raise production, while reaching agreement with Iran on a freeze.
Falih
and his Algerian counterpart Boutarfa called for the date an OPEC preparatory
meeting of experts ahead of the Vienna conference to be brought forward to
November 21 from its scheduled date of November 25, APS reported.
OPEC
officials said in September that the group would aim for a combined output of
32.5-33 million bpd.
On Friday, however, prices fell on news from OPEC that it had pumped oil in October at record levels of 33.64 million bpd, 236,000 barrels per day more than the previous month.
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