Over-delivering Saudi Arabia and blackouts in Venezuela helped push OPEC’s crude oil production down by 570,000 bpd from February to 30.23 million bpd in March—the lowest production from the cartel in more than four years, according to the monthly S&P Global Platts survey published on Friday.
OPEC’s de facto leader and biggest
producer, Saudi Arabia, saw its production drop in March to the lowest level
since February 2017. The Saudis delivered on their promise to cut more than
pledged in the pact and slashed output by another 280,000 bpd last month, with
March production at 9.87 million bpd, according to the S&P Global Platts
survey.
Venezuela, for its part, saw its
production drop to a 16-year-low, at 740,000 bpd, due to the massive blackouts
that crippled oil production and exports in March, the Platts survey found.
OPEC’s second-biggest producer Iraq
cut its production by 100,000 bpd from February to 4.57 million bpd in March,
according to the survey. This, however, was still slightly above Iraq’s 4.512 million bpd production cap under the deal.
After an initial plunge following
the U.S. sanctions on its industry, Iran’s production has been holding
relatively steady over the past couple of months, and the Islamic Republic
pumped 2.69 million bpd in March, the Platts survey showed.
The resumption of operations at
Libya’s biggest oil field, Sharara, pushed Libya’s production up to 1.06
million bpd in March, according to the survey.
Earlier this week, the monthly
Reuters survey showed that OPEC’s oil production in March 2019 fell to its lowest level
since February 2015, as Saudi Arabia cut more than it
had pledged and Venezuela continued to struggle amid U.S. sanctions and a major
blackout.
The combined production of all 14
OPEC members stood at 30.4 million bpd last month, down by 280,000 bpd compared
to February and the lowest level of OPEC production since February four years
ago, according to the Reuters survey.
OPEC will publish official production figures for its members in its Monthly
Oil Market Report (MOMR) due out on Wednesday, April 10.