Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com -- The biggest farce in the oil market, one which OPEC ignores with impunity, might be nearing its end: U.S. sanctions on Iranian crude.

The Biden administration is trying to replace the Trump-era sanctions with an agreement that will prevent Tehran from having any weapons-grade nuclear program, a pact that the International Atomic Energy Agency will enforce.

In the meantime, Iran exports hundreds of thousands of barrels of oil daily, in violation of the sanctions, which the State Department clearly isn’t doing enough about.

The bigger charade on this comes from OPEC, or the Saudi-led Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries. The cartel’s 13 member countries, and 10 non-member oil-producing allies, who when put together are known as OPEC+, basically dominate the world oil trade.

Total world oil demand is expected to expand by 5.7 million barrels daily in 2021 to 96.7 million, following a 8.7 million-barrel collapse last year, according to the Paris-based International Energy Agency, which oversees the interest of Western oil consumers.

OPEC, in a report released two weeks ago, said it expects demand for its crude at 27.7 million barrels daily in 2021, up 200,000 from an April estimate.

Non-OPEC supply was expected to rise by 700,000 barrels daily, down from the April estimate of 930,000, it said.

The problem is nowhere in these numbers is an estimate of what the situation would be if Iranian exports are legitimately restored to the oil market. Iran was a founding member of OPEC and the world’s fourth largest crude exporter until Trump’s sanctions came on in 2018.

Trump's punitive action has led Tehran’s arch-rival Saudi Arabia, which controls OPEC, to virtually treat Iran as an outcast over the past three years, omitting it from any projections on the cartel's supply-demand.

The irony is this OPEC behavior has continued despite Iran steadily raising its illicit crude exports since the ban was imposed on its oil, moving from a cat-and-mouse game under the Trump administration to a full-fledged brazen violation of sanctions with Biden in office.

To OPEC+’s credit, the slash of 7-8 million barrels per day of production by the 23-nation grouping since April 2020 was what helped U.S. crude prices rebound from a pandemic crush of minus $40 per barrel to a 2021 high of just under $68.

But while the rest of the producers in the alliance were cutting, Iran was slowly adding. That, of course, didn’t matter for all of last year when demand for oil was still restrained and the focus was almost entirely on the OPEC+ cuts which helped drain a huge global glut.