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position:cippe > Home > News > Industrial News >
Iran says its planned boost in oil exports won’t harm market
Pubdate:2016-01-04 09:48
Source:worldoil.com
Click: times
TEHRAN (Bloomberg) -- Iran is trying to regain its lost share of global crude sales and has no intention of harming the oil market with its planned increase in production once sanctions are lifted from its economy, Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said.
“The oil ministry intends to boost Iran’s crude oil exports by an aggregate of 1 MMbopdin two phases,” Zanganeh said, according to the official Islamic Republic News Agency. In the first phase, Iran will raise exports by 500,000 bopd within a week after the removal of international sanctions, he said. The country will add another 500,000 bopd in a second phase within six months after the curbs end, Zanganeh said.
Brent crude slid 35% last year as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries raised output in the face of already rising global stockpiles. Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest crude exporter, has led OPEC in fighting for market share against higher-cost producers such as shale drillers in the U.S. The group set aside its output target of 30 MMbopd at a meeting in Vienna last month.
As part of its efforts to increase production, the country will probably award Chinese companies development rights for the second phase of the North Azadegan oil field in southwestern Iran, Zanganeh said. Under an accord, the Chinese will have to submit a proposal to the Iranian oil ministry for examination and approval, he said, without identifying any companies. Iran pumped 2.7 MMbopd of oil in December, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
The amount of additional Iranian crude reaching foreign buyers will depend on conditions in an oil market oversupplied by 2.5 to 3 MMbopd, the Iranian Oil Ministry’s Shana news agency reported on Saturday, citing Mohsen Ghamsari, the head of international affairs at state-run National Iranian Oil Co.