LOGA: OPEC deal cuts ‘fall short’

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A oil and gas advocacy organization on Monday characterized a deal between OPEC and other major producers like Russia to reduce production by 10 million barrels a day as falling short of what Louisiana’s independent oil and gas producers need to survive.

In a statement issued yesterday afternoon, Louisiana Oil & Gas Association President Gifford Briggs said the deal “may eventually help move the needle in the right direction,” but “fall far short.”

The agreed-upon reduction between Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and other major producers like Russia, known as OPEC+ is set to begin next month.

In the statement contending the industry is “on the verge of collapsing,” Briggs urges Louisiana lawmakers to provide immediate severance tax relief and support legislation to address the government sponsored coastal lawsuits. 

“These important steps will let Louisiana energy companies stay in business,” he says, “so they can keep people working and keep wells flowing.” 

“This is a time for bold, decisive action, not small steps in the right direction,” Briggs says. “With tens of thousands of jobs and millions of dollars in tax revenue at risk, it is essential for policymakers at all levels of government to implement aggressive and immediate solutions to offset the expectation of prolonged shut-in wells, a massively oversupplied world oil market and the global shutdown of our economy.” 

The plan by OPEC+ will slash 9.7 million barrels a day, or close to 10% of the world’s output, in May or June. The market responded to the news of a deal last Thursday with a drop in the futures price for West Texas Intermedia (WTI), signaling a belief that the cuts were not deep enough.

Global oil storage capacity is quickly becoming a threat, with many experts predicting that storage will dry up completely sometime in May. This threat has already become widespread reality in Louisiana where producers are being crippled by below-$10/bbl agreements and limited production sales for May crude deliveries. 

“The futures market is not a true representation of what is happening on the ground here in Louisiana,” Briggs says. “Companies simply cannot survive when they cannot sell the oil they produce, and what they do sell at such a low price.”