- Energy Transition: Projections of peak oil, gas, and coal demand before 2030 deemed ‘extremely risky and impractical’
- Africa: BW Offshore wraps up much-anticipated sale of Nigerian FPSO
- Senegal: European JV aims to revolutionize country’s power infrastructure
- Congo: Eni, Lukoil, and SNPC ink LNG sale and purchase agreement in a ‘significant milestone’
- Aramco CEO calls for ‘more realistic and robust’ multi-source plan in global energy transition
Global Markets: Trump Pushes for Lower Oil Prices

U.S. President Donald Trump has pushed for lower oil prices in a Twitter statement published Wednesday.
“The biggest impact will be to Saudi Arabia’s effort to cut production next month,” Gatdula said.
“Saudi Arabia is grateful for Trump’s support in the Khashoggi affair and not lowering oil output would publicly acknowledge the close relationship,” he added.
“Cutting production would help stem price declines but would risk reigniting anti-Saudi Arabia rhetoric. Both choices poise fallout which are negative for Saudi Arabia,” Gatdula continued.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is due to hold its 175th ordinary meeting in Austria, Vienna, on December 6.
Earlier this month, Vandana Hari, the founder of Vanda Insights, stated in a television interview with Bloomberg that “the time has come, clearly, that OPEC has to start worrying”.
“It is starting to worry about the supply demand balance again swinging back to surplus next year,” Hari said in the interview.
Hari also highlighted in the interview that the “reinvented OPEC since 2017” has “very consistently” said that it’s going to have “a more hands on approach”.
“It’s going to do a constant balancing, re-balancing of the market, if you will, and we saw evidence of that very clearly in June this year when they stepped away … a little bit from their output restraint agreement of 2016 and said ‘ok, Venezuelan production is going down, Iran production might slump as well so we will put an extra one million barrels per day in the market’,” Hari told Bloomberg in the interview. source: by Andreas Exarheas | Rigzone staff
You must log in to post a comment.