Libyan and Nigerian officials may attend a joint
meeting between OPEC and non-OPEC nations later this month as oil
producers look for ways to cap rising production to help support oil
prices.
Both countries have boosted production
since they were exempted from an OPEC-led deal to cut output, weighing
on global prices LCOc1. This has prompted more talk among producers
about including them in the pact.
Six ministers from OPEC
and non-OPEC nations including Kuwait, Venezuela, Algeria, Saudi
Arabia, Russia and Oman will meet on July 24 in St Petersburg, Russia,
to discuss the current situation in the oil market.
Nigeria's
oil minister, Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, was invited to the meeting but is
unable to attend due to another commitment, Kuwaiti Oil Minister Essam
al-Marzouq told reporters at the same Istanbul event.
Instead,
the group will probably ask a technical committee involving the six
OPEC and non-OPEC members, which is due to convene before the ministers
hold their talks, to meet Nigerian and Libyan representatives to discuss
their production plans, he said.
The monitoring panel, called the Joint Ministerial
Monitoring Committee which Kuwait chairs, could recommend expanding the
pact to the wider group, which holds its next meeting in November.
Both
Nigeria and Libya were given exemptions to the supply cut, under which
OPEC, Russia and other non-OPEC producers are reducing their output by
about 1.8 million barrels per day because their output has been curbed
by conflict.
OPEC delegates have said bringing
Nigeria or Libya into the production pact would likely focus on capping
their output, rather than asking them to cut their supply so soon after
it had recovered from involuntary curbs.
Kachikwu
has said that Nigeria was not opposed in principle to joining OPEC's
production cap, but would have to wait and see if production returned to
acceptable levels.
OPEC has not been in touch
with Libya on the issue of capping the country's output, an OPEC
delegate said. The Libyan government has not received an invitation to
attend the ministerial meeting in Russia, he added.

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