In News –Most of the OPEC+ producers, led by the world’s top exporter Saudi Arabia decided to curb oil supplies till April.
About
- OPEC and its allies, a group known as OPEC+, agreed not to increase oil supply till April as they await a more substantial recovery in demand amid the coronavirus pandemic.
- After OPEC’s decision, crude oil prices rose to over $71 per barrel although the prices eased to $69.08 a barrel by 1027 GMT.
- Saudi has also raised the selling price of its oil for Asia.
- This year, Iraq has cut annual supply volumes while Kuwait has shortened the duration of contracts with Indian buyers to nine months.
- Iraq and Saudi Arabia are the two biggest oil suppliers to India.
Implications on India
- India, the world’s third-biggest oil importer and consumer stated that the decision by major producers to extend output cuts as prices move higher could threaten the consumption led-recovery in some countries.
- India imports about 84% of its overall crude needs with over 60% of that coming from Middle Eastern countries, which are typically cheaper than those from the West.
- Rising oil prices are posing fiscal challenges for India, where heavily-taxed retail fuel prices have touched record highs in some parts of the country, threatening the demand-driven recovery.
Steps taken by India
- India has asked state refiners to speed up the diversification of oil imports to gradually cut their dependence on the Middle East after the OPEC+ decision.
- India, hit hard by the soaring oil prices, has urged producers to ease output cuts and help the global economic recovery.
- One plan is to import oil from new producer Guyana.
- The country’s top refiner Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) has also renewed its oil import contract with Russia.
- India hopes to resume Iranian oil imports this year.
About OPEC
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