10 Mar 2022

War in Ukraine: Oil prices plunge as UAE supports supply boost

4:47 pm on 10 March 2022

Oil prices have plunged after the United Arab Emirates said it supported increasing production.

The oil pump, industrial equipment

Oil prices have been rising since Russia invaded Ukraine last month. Photo: 123RF

Brent crude, an international benchmark, fell more than 17 percent at one point after the statement by the UAE, a member of the powerful oil cartel Opec.

The fall follows weeks of skyrocketing oil prices due to supply disruptions sparked by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

The rising prices have put a financial squeeze on households around the world.

President Joe Biden and other leaders have pledged to try to ease the price pressures for households. Officials from the US have been in talks with oil producers aimed at boosting supply.

"We favour production increases and will be encouraging Opec to consider higher production levels," Ambassador Yousuf Al Otaiba said in a statement tweeted by the UAE Embassy in Washington.

Energy prices have been soaring for more than a year amid a rapid rebound in demand for oil, which had collapsed during the pandemic.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine added new price pressures, as sanctions make it hard for the country - typically the producer of about 7 percent of global supplies - to find buyers for its oil.

The US and Canada have also announced bans on Russian oil imports, while the UK said it would phase them out by the end of the year.

Oil prices have jumped more than 30 percent since 24 February, touching $US139 ($NZ203) at one point this week before falling back. Oil prices settled down about 12 percent, at about $US112 a barrel.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) also recently agreed to release 60 million barrels of oil from strategic national reserves, but that move is not enough to respond to the recent increase in prices.

The agency said on Wednesday that oil reserves may be tapped further.

"If there's a need, if our governments decide so, we can bring more oil to the markets, as one part of the response," said EIA chief Faith Birol.

The UAE statement comes just one week after Opec rebuffed calls to raise production levels, saying it would stick to an earlier plan to increase output gradually.

Stocks in Asia jumped following gains in the US and Europe. Japan's Nikkei index was more than 3 percent higher in morning trade, while the Hang Seng in Hong Kong was up by 2.3 percent.

_BBC

Get the RNZ app

for ad-free news and current affairs