Putin Says Russia May Join OPEC In Oil Production Curbs

 | Oct 21, 2016 03:31AM ET

On October 10, speaking at the World Energy Congress in Istanbul, Russian President Vladimir Putin called Russia to participate with OPEC in oil production cuts:

We believe a freeze or a cutting of the production of oil is the only way to preserve the stability of the energy sector and accelerate a rebalancing of the market… Russia is ready to join joint measures limiting production and calls on other exporting countries to do the same.

The announcement set the stage for an oil price rally that continued what had begun after a tentative OPEC agreement was brokered a little more than a week before.

If a deal is struck among OPEC members, and between OPEC members and Russia (which is not a member of OPEC, but is the world’s largest oil producer), the stage could be set for modest production cuts (1–2% according to OPEC communications made a week before Russia’s announcement). That announcement would come at OPEC’s next meeting, scheduled for November 30 in Austria.

Of course, it’s not a done deal. Russia has a history of failing to follow through on tentative commitments to production cuts -- for example, in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, and during the 2008 financial crisis. There are also technical difficulties that can make production cuts problematic in many Russian fields.

Should a deal actually be made in November, the prediction of Saudi energy minister Khalid al-Falih that $60 oil is “not unthinkable” could come to pass.

We note, though, that besides the difficulty of getting the Russians on board, there are still major problems to be overcome: most notably that the two other critical players, Saudi Arabia and Iran, are currently involved in two intense and ugly proxy wars in Syria and Yemen. In Syria, Iran backs the government of Bashar al-Assad, whose family belongs to the heterodox Alawite sect of Shi’ite Islam; and in Yemen, Iran is supporting the rebel Houthis, also a dissident Shi’ite group.

The Saudis are launching air strikes against the Houthis in Yemen and sending arms and money to opposition fighters in Syria -- many of whom are not “moderate rebels” but rather fundamentalist Wahhabi jihadis. Saudi’s “existential fear” is the consolidation of a “Shi’ite crescent” from Iran to the coast of the Mediterranean -- and perhaps from there to the Shi’ites of Yemen and, more ominously, the suppressed Shi’ites within the Kingdom itself.