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OPEC+ leans towards resumption in oil output increases from April

Pictured is the OPEC logo on the wall of the new OPEC headquarters in Vienna
 
Pictured is the OPEC logo on the wall of the new OPEC headquarters in Vienna

MOSCOW/LONDON: OPEC+ is leaning towards a resumption in oil output increases from April, three OPEC+ sources said, as the group ⁠prepares for peak summer demand and price strength is bolstered by tensions ⁠over US-Iran relations.
The resumption would allow OPEC leader Saudi Arabia and fellow member the UAE to regain market share at a time members such as Russia, Venezuela and ‌Iran contend with Western sanctions and Kazakh output ​is restrained by ⁠a series of setbacks.
Eight OPEC+ producers meet on March 1.
The eight members raised production quotas by about 2.9 million barrels ​per day from April to the end of December 2025, equating to about 3 per cent of global demand and froze further planned increases for January through March 2026 because of seasonally weaker consumption.
The Brent crude benchmark is trading near $68 a barrel despite ‌speculation that a supply glut would suppress prices this year. That's ​not far from a six-month high of $71.89 hit in January on tensions between ​the ‌United ⁠States and Iran.
All three OPEC+ sources, who declined to be identified by name, said the eight members at the March 1 meeting were ​leaning towards a resumption in production quota increases from ⁠April. Three other sources ​familiar with OPEC+ thinking said they expected increases to resume in April.
No decision has yet been made and talks will continue in the weeks ahead of the March 1 meeting, two of the OPEC+ sources said.
OPEC ​and authorities in Russia and Saudi Arabia did not reply ​immediately to requests for comment.