Saudi Arabia will cut crude oil shipments to its
customers in August by more than 600,000 barrels per day to balance the
rise in domestic consumption during the summer, while staying within its
OPEC production commitment, a Saudi industry source said.
"There
is strong demand for our crude but we are sticking to our OPEC
commitments," the source, who is familiar with the kingdom's oil policy,
said on Wednesday.
Crude exports for August will fall to their lowest level this year at around 6.6 million bpd, the source added.
Crude
allocations to Asia for August will be reduced by about 200,000 bpd to
3.5 million bpd, while allocations to Europe will be down by around
70,000 bpd at 520,000 bpd.
Oil majors were allocated some 200,000 bpd less in August at 780,000 bpd. Exports to the United States will be below 800,000 bpd in August, the source said.
Saudi
Arabia told the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries its
oil production in June rose to 10.07 million bpd, slightly above its
OPEC target, mainly due to an increase in domestic crude burning for
power during summer.
The source also cited
late May port closures as pushing some cargoes into June, which may have
resulted in higher June exports. The source said July oil output would
be lower than June, without providing details.
A joint ministerial committee from OPEC and
non-OPEC countries including Saudi Arabia and Russia, the world's
biggest oil producers, will meet on July 24 to discuss compliance with a
supply-cut pact and review the rise in output from Nigeria and Libya.
Both countries were exempted from the production cuts.
The
Saudi source said ministers would discuss several ideas at the meeting
and that the recent rise in output from Nigeria and Libya "is not big in
a way that should disturb the market".

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