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Business / Qatar Business

Nigeria backs Doha quartet deal on oil output freeze

Published: 22 Feb 2016 - 01:24 am | Last Updated: 09 Nov 2021 - 06:18 am
Peninsula

Minister of Energy and Industry H E Dr Mohammed bin Saleh Al Sada with Nigerian Oil Minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachiwku in Doha yesterday.

DOHA: Nigerian Oil Minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachiwku affirmed his country’s approval and support for the Doha four-way oil agreement, where in oil producers Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Russia, should keep their output ceiling at January 2016 level.

The remarks were made by the Nigerian oil minister as he met reporters here yesterday. Earlier, Minister of Energy and Industry H E Dr Mohammed bin Saleh Al Sada, who is also the President of Opec, met with Nigeria’s Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Kachiwku and the delegation accompanying him on the visit to Qatar. They discussed issues pertaining to the global prices of oil and exchanged their views regarding current levels. They also discussed bilateral relations and the scope of cooperation in the energy field.
The biggest oil producer in Africa supports a production freeze. Its oil production will be 2.2 million barrels a day this month, unchanged from January, Kachikwu said. 
“Countries like Iran and Iraq have been out of the market for a while and if they are to come back you shouldn’t freeze them out where they are, you should freeze them at a higher level,” Kachikwu said. “By June we will come very close to tightening the market,” Bloomberg reported.
Saudi Arabia, Russia, Venezuela and Qatar agreed last week to keep production at January levels, as long as others follow suit, in an effort to revive prices from a 12-year low. Iran’s production has slumped since international sanctions were imposed on its exports, and Iraq is seeking to rebuild following years of war and under-investment.
Kachikwu spoke with reporters after meeting with Al Sada and Qatar Petroleum CEO Saad Sharida Al Kaabi in Doha. He’s scheduled to meet with Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi on Monday, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because his itinerary isn’t public. “Nigeria will continue to look at the possibility of increasing production, not to sell it, because we have local consumption that is essential for us,” Kachikwu said. “Right now we are not even exporting the quantity that Opec has given us.” Demand from domestic refineries is at least 500,000 barrels of oil a day, he said.
There is little chance that the Opec will hold an emergency meeting before the next regular one scheduled for June, Kachikwu said. “Rather than focus on emergency meeting, we need to talk more. Because if you held a meeting when you haven’t agreed largely on the solution it wouldn’t be productive and would also affect the price of oil.”The Peninsula