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Politics

Qatar says will leave OPEC

December 3, 2018

The Gulf nation of Qatar's new energy minister said that his country will leave OPEC effective January of 2019. He said that he had informed OPEC of his decision ahead of his announcement.

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Katar Öl- und Erdgasförderung bei Ras Laffan
Image: Getty Images/AFP/K. Jaafar

Qatar has announced that it will leave OPEC next month. The announcement was made by the Gulf state's new energy minister, Saad al-Kaabi, on Monday.

"Qatar has decided to withdraw its membership from OPEC effective January 2019," Kaabi said at a Doha press conference.

"The withdrawal decision reflects Qatar's desire to focus its efforts on plans to develop and increase its natural gas production from 77 million tons per year to 110 million tons in the coming years," the minister was quoted as saying.

"Qatar is proud in its international standing at the forefront of natural gas producers, and as the biggest exporter of LNG - the cleanest fossil fuel, which has given Qatar a strong and resilient economy," Qatar Petroleum also quoted Kaabi as saying.

LNG terminal in Qatar
Qatar is the leading producer of LNGImage: picture-alliance/Construction Photography/T. Motion

It marks the first time a Mideast nation has left the cartel since its founding in 1960. Kaabi said Qatar wants to raise its oil production from 4.8 million barrels of oil equivalent a day to 6.5 million barrels alongside the increase in LNG.

He added that OPEC was told of the decision on Monday ahead of the announcement. There was no immediate comment from the Vienna-based organization.

In an apparent swipe at top OPEC exporter Saudi Arabia, al-Kaabi said his country was not about "to get out of the oil business but that the cartel was "controlled by an organization managed by a country."

Oil prices up

Oil prices soared on Monday after Russia and Saudi Arabia renewed an agreement to cap output, while the US agreed to halt raising tariffs on Chinese imports, stalling a trade row that many feared could hit demand for the commodity.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Saturday he and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman "have agreed to extend our agreement" to limit production as prices slump on global markets.

An existing deal committing OPEC and non-members to cuts expires this year. While there was no announcement on how much would be cut and for how long, the pact between the world's two biggest crude exporters was cheered by oil traders, with Brent jumping $2.42 to $53.35 and West Texas Intermediate up $2.60 at $62.06 on Monday.
 

ng, av/rc (dpa, AFP)

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