The United Arab Emirates Energy Minister Suhail
bin Mohammed al-Mazroui said on Friday he hopes that global supplies
will start tightening in the second half of the year when demand picks
up.
OPEC's
supply cuts have also been countered by rising U.S. production, which
has increased almost 12 percent since mid-2016 to 9.4 million bpd. The
number of rigs drilling for new U.S. oil supply has also climbed since
last year though the pace has slowed in recent weeks.
Brent crude oil
prices remain just under the key $50 per barrel mark on concerns about
high supplies from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC) despite a pledge to cut output in a bid to tighten the market.
OPEC,
together with some non-members like Russia, has extended a deal to cut
production by 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) to March 2018.
However, OPEC's compliance slumped to 78 percent in
June as higher-than-allowed output from Algeria, Ecuador, Gabon, Iraq,
the UAE and Venezuela offset strong compliance from Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, Qatar and Angola, the International Energy Agency said last
week.
Oil
traders are looking ahead to Monday's meeting between OPEC and non-OPEC
members to see if it will address rising production from Nigeria and
Libya, which have been exempted from the cuts.
OPEC's Joint Ministerial Committee monitors compliance with the supply pact and will meet in St Petersburg, Russia.

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