riyadh-2375435_1920
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. For illustrative purposes only. Image Credit: Agency

Dubai: The world’s biggest oil exporter see no need to take immediate action in the crude market, though it will respond to the requirements of buyers affected by the end of US waivers on imports from Iran, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al Falih said.

Oil producers will exercise some market management after June, when the current round of global output cuts is set to expire, Al Falih told reporters on Wednesday in Riyadh. Saudi Arabia won’t change its production level for May and won’t be decreasing its current output, he said.

“We will see what the customers want,” Al Falih said. “I think our intent is to remain within our voluntary production limit, but at the same time to be responsive to our customers, especially those who have been under waivers, and those waivers have been withdrawn.”

Al Falih’s comments were his first extended public response to the US decision on Monday to stop issuing waivers from sanctions for countries buying oil from Iran. Such importers must now secure alternative supplies or risk being hit with US penalties after Washington scrapped the waivers in an effort to pressure Iran over its regional policies and nuclear programme.

“We allocated May, and the programme is set — the ships are scheduled — so I think there will be very little variation in May production from the last couple of months,” he said.

Saudi oil shipments for June will be allocated early next month, he said. “We think there will be an uptick in real demand, but certainly we’re not going to be pre-emptive and increase production preemptively because the market is well supplied and inventories continue to rise.”

Saudi Arabia has led the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries and allied producers such as Russia in cutting output to try to buttress crude prices and avert a glut.

— Bloomberg