Ecuador to Exit OPEC in January

Ecuador, one of OPEC’s smallest members, will leave the group in January as it seeks to increase revenue from crude oil sales.

 

Ecuador has not been adhering to OPEC quotas as it seeks to boost production, which has held around 530,000 barrels a day for the past year. In September, the country’s output was ahead of only the Republic of Congo, Gabon and Equatorial Guinea in the 14-member Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries.

 

“The decision is rooted in the issues and internal challenges which the country needs to bear related to fiscal sustainability,” the country’s resources ministry said on the 1st October.

 

The country will “continue to support all efforts which seek to stabilise the world oil market,” the ministry said.

 

Earlier this year, Resources Minister Carlos Perez said Ecuador was going ahead with higher oil production than the latest ceiling set in an agreement between global oil exporters which was aimed at shrinking a market glut.

 

The nation’s small role in OPEC meant it did not need to stick to the group’s united front, he said in February, when output was already above its quota.

 

That was not the first time the South American country did not adhere to limits. In 2017, Mr Perez got a call from then Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih when he abandoned the OPEC deal because of the nation’s troubled fiscal and economic situation. Ecuador signalled at the time that it wanted to keep increasing production.

 

The country’s departure comes amid efforts by President Lenin Moreno to reverse economic policies imposed by his predecessor, Rafael Correa, who restarted Ecuador’s OPEC membership in 2007, 15 years after it had been suspended.

 

Local oil analysts have criticised Ecuador’s participation because it has had to comply with output ceilings while on its own not producing enough to influence market prices for crude.

 

Ecuador is not the only country to leave OPEC over the years. Indonesia suspended its membership in 2016, a year after it was readmitted to the group, while Gabon re-joined the same year after leaving in 1995.

 

OPEC output sank the most in 16 years last month after an attack on Saudi Arabia’s energy facilities.

 

The group and its allies have committed to cutting supply by 1.2 million barrels a day to support prices.

 

Source: Rigzone