“At the next meeting, which will be held on the 3rd and 4th (of June), there will be no additional reduction, and as for Iraq, we cannot reduce further,” Abdel-Ghani said in an interview, his first to foreign media since taking office last year.
Then in a surprise move in early April, Saudi Arabia and other OPEC+ members announced further oil output cuts of around 1.2 million barrels per day.
The announcement helped push oil prices sharply higher, but those gains have since been erased as fears of a global economic slowdown took hold.
OPEC+ members are set to meet in Vienna on June 4 to decide on their next course of action.
“The second cut was voluntary and it has helped us a lot in the stability of the market and boosting prices,” Abdel-Ghani said.
The April cuts punished oil short sellers, or those who bet on oil price declines.
Back in 2020, Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman warned traders against betting heavily in the oil market, promising that those who gamble on the oil price would be “ouching like hell”.
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