Oil prices will remain relatively low in the next
year or two as supplies remain ample despite ongoing cuts by OPEC,
although potential new sanctions by the United States against Iran pose
upside risk to the market, the president of consultancy Facts Global
Energy (FGE) said.
With production in the United States expected to rise
from around 9.5 million bpd now to over 10 million bpd next year, Brown
said OPEC would have little choice than to extend the production cuts
beyond their currently scheduled end in March 2018.
Starting this year, the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other
producers including Russia have agreed to cut output by 1.8 million
barrels per day (bpd) in order to prop up prices.
While
this was resulting in a gradually tighter market compared with the
strong overproduction of the 2017 to 2016 period, FGE President Jeff
Brown told the Reuters Global Commodities Summit that fuel inventories
would likely remain high in 2018 and 2019.
“We
don’t see big reasons for inventories to go down a lot from still high
levels now. Hence we don’t see big reasons for prices to go up or down
by much in 2018, and it’s similar for 2019,” Brown said in Singapore on
Wednesday.
One of the biggest risks to oil supplies and prices
are potentially new U.S. sanctions against Iran, which President Donald
Trump is threatening to impose, not two years after they were lifted
under a 2015 deal between Tehran and leading world powers after Iran
agreed to limit its disputed nuclear program.
Despite strong oil demand growth,
especially from emerging economies, and the risk of unexpected supply
disruptions, Brown warned against industry hopes for a return to $100
per barrel prices.

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