BAKU, Azerbaijan, January 26. Angola’s exit is unlikely to significantly alter OPEC’s strategy or its influence on global oil markets and prices, Trend reports via BMI, a Fitch Solutions company.
The decision comes against a backdrop of challenges faced by West African producers within OPEC.
Over recent years, West Africa, including Angola, has experienced substantial declines in oil production. These declines have primarily stemmed from factors such as maturing assets, limited exploration, and inadequate upstream investment, exacerbated by unfavorable fiscal and regulatory conditions. Despite these challenges, whenever possible, producers in the region have endeavored to boost production.
Angola's exit from OPEC in December 2023 followed a third-party assessment that downgraded its reference production level, used to calculate OPEC+ cuts, from 1.46 million b/d to 1.11 million b/d. This decision, while noteworthy, is not unprecedented, as OPEC's membership has seen fluctuations over time. Compliance with OPEC+ agreements has varied, and few producers undergo rigorous scrutiny from market participants.
Angola's departure from OPEC is unlikely to have a significant impact on oil prices, as the country has not wielded considerable influence over price movements due to its struggles with involuntary production declines. However, it does highlight the challenges stemming from divergent domestic oil policies and production outlooks within OPEC+.
Divergent performances among member states have long been characteristic of OPEC, but with increasingly disparate production outlooks, the burden of OPEC+ production cuts may become more uneven. This underscores the ongoing complexities within the group as it navigates a changing global oil landscape.
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