Reuters
Khobar, Saudi Arabia


Venezuela’s oil minister heads a delegation to meet Saudi Arabian oil officials yesterday, coming from talks in Iran, in an Opec diplomatic tour as its need for higher oil prices gains urgency.
Suffering from a slowing economy, soaring inflation and shortages, producer Venezuela is among the members of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries most deeply wounded by the oil price fall.
Its need for Opec to cut supply to support prices has failed to shift the stance of Saudi Arabia and its Gulf Opec allies, which are focusing on protecting market share.
An industry source told Reuters a visiting oil sector delegation from Venezuela will meet Saudi Deputy Oil Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman in Saudi Arabia yesterday.
Iran’s state news agency IRNA reported yesterday that Venezuelan Oil Minister Asdrubal Chavez had met Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh in Tehran, for talks that included the prospect of higher Iranian supplies.
“We expect the members of Opec to pave the ground for (an) increase of Iran’s oil production that will reach global markets when sanctions are lifted,” Zanganeh said during the meeting, the agency reported.
The Venezuelan delegation will meet Prince Abdulaziz because Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi had been visiting South Korea. No further details were immediately available, and there was no immediate comment from the Saudi government.
The Venezuelan foreign ministry said on its Twitter account on Monday that the oil minister, plus foreign minister Delcy Rodriguez and finance minister Rodolfo Marco Torres had arrived in Saudi Arabia “to hold bilateral and working meetings”. It did not elaborate.
Oil prices have almost halved since June last year in a drop that deepened after Opec refused to cut production. The price slide is more painful for countries such as Venezuela and Iran than the wealthier Gulf states.
In January, a diplomatic tour by Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro taking in Saudi Arabia as well as fellow Opec members Qatar and Algeria failed to soften the refusal of the Gulf Opec countries to cut output. Opec meets on June 5. Iran and a Libyan Opec official have urged the group to consider output cuts, while Kuwait – in a view expected to be that of the other Gulf Opec members – has said the policy will remain unchanged.

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