U.S. Targets OPEC Oil Autonomy As Production Cuts Bear Fruit

 | Feb 19, 2019 03:16AM ET

Two proposed U.S. legislations are threatening to deprive Saudi Arabia and Russia of autonomy in their oil policy, just as the OPEC+ collaboration between the two countries brings crude back into a bull market.

The No Oil Producing and Exporting Cartels Act (NOPEC), approved on Feb. 7 by a U.S. Congressional panel, and the Defending American Security From Kremlin Aggression Act (DASKA), originally proposed last year and revised a week ago by Congress, will have different market outcomes if enforced.

NOPEC could push oil prices lower by hindering Saudi-coordinated production cuts. DASKA, on the other hand, could send crude rallying by issuing sanctions on Russian energy projects.

Both are bipartisan bills—meaning they are supported by Republicans as well as Democrat lawmakers—and both need White House initiative for action.

But while their outcomes may be different, the two bills pursue the same agenda: preserving U.S. interests and energy policy over that of any nation.

h3 NOPEC Strikes At Heart Of OPEC/h3

Of the two, NOPEC in particular could inhibit the OPEC group by undermining the production policies that have been at the heart of the cartel’s six decade-long oil market management.