US President Donald Trump said on Saturday that
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman had agreed to his request to ramp up oil production,
a week after OPEC already announced an output rise.
Trump has repeatedly lashed out at OPEC on Twitter
in recent months, piling pressure on Riyadh, a major ally, to boost output as
he hopes for lower pump prices before midterm congressional elections in
November.
His latest comments come a week after ministers from
the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries — of which Saudi Arabia
is the major member — had already agreed to raise output from July.
Non-OPEC member Russia on June 23 also backed the
effort, capping a week of tense diplomacy for the grouping that averted a
damaging rift between arch foes Iran and Saudi Arabia.
The ministers announced they would ramp up oil
production by around one million barrels a day from July.
The talks had centered on whether to amend an
18-month-old supply-cut deal between OPEC members and allied countries, including
Russia, that has cleared a global oil glut and lifted crude prices.
Saudi Arabia, backed by non-member Russia, had
argued strongly in favor of increasing production as grumbles in major consumer
countries like the United States, India and China have grown about high prices.
Iran opposed any changes to the original
production-cut deal at a time when its oil industry is facing renewed sanctions
over Trump’s decision to quit the international nuclear deal with Tehran.
In the end, both sides were able to save face.
The current production curb pact calls for
participating countries to trim output by 1.8 million barrels a day.
But production constraints and geopolitical factors
have seen several nations exceed their restriction quotas, keeping about 2.8
million barrels off the market, according to OPEC.
By agreeing to collectively raise output by a
million barrels, member countries are simply committing to comply fully with
the deal struck in late 2016.
Iran has accused Trump of trying to politicize OPEC
and said it was US sanctions on Iran and Venezuela that had helped push up
prices.
Saudi Arabia was producing more than 9.9 million
barrels a day in May, according to OPEC, citing secondary sources.