Venezuela said on Tuesday it will cut 95,000
barrels per day of oil production in the New Year in fulfillment of a
producers' deal to reduce global output and strengthen prices.
Jan. 1 marks the start of the pact by the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and several non-OPEC
producers to lower production by almost 1.8 million bpd.
"Without prejudicing its international
contractual obligations, from Jan. 1 2017, (state oil company) PDVSA
and/or its subsidiaries will implement a reduction in the volumes of its
main crude sale contracts, all in conformity with existing terms and
conditions," the Energy Ministry said.
Venezuela, a price hawk within OPEC and
one of the nations worst affected by a fall in crude revenue since
mid-2014, currently produces just over 2.4 million barrels of crude and
condensates per day, according to ministry data.
Oil Minister Eulogio Del Pino said
the output deal should lead to a re-balancing of inventories, after
which he forecast Brent crude would settle at a price range of around
$60-$70 a barrel and Venezuela's crude basket between $45-$55 a barrel.
Venezuela's basket trades at a discount to other benchmarks because of its higher content of heavy oil.
President Nicolas Maduro has said he will soon embark on a tour of oil-producing nations to support the OPEC deal.
"I am proposing a new system, a new
formula to fix markets and oil prices to enable stability, harmony,
continuity," he said on Monday, without giving further details of his
itinerary or planned proposal to fellow producers.
"I aspire to at least 10 years of stability with realistic, fair prices of oil, and I am going to achieve it."
Oil prices jumped 1.7 percent on
Tuesday, continuing a year-end rally with support from expectations of
tighter supply once the first output cut deal between OPEC and non-OPEC
producers in 15 years takes effect on Sunday.
Brent rose 94 cents, or 1.7 percent, to $56.10 a barrel.
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