Saudi Arabia's ability to pump extra oil is more limited than it seems and is already near the sustainable maximum, report says

Saudi Arabia is close to its capacity for oil production, a new report said Wednesday
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
  • Saudi Arabia is close to maxing out its oil production capacity, sources told the Wall Street Journal.
  • The world's top crude exporter is pumping about 10.5 million barrels per day currently.
  • But Saudi Arabia would have trouble ramping up to 11 million for more than a few months at a time or to 12 million for more than a few weeks.

Saudi Arabia would struggle to produce more oil and is already near its limit for how much it can pump at a sustainable rate, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday. 

The world's top crude exporter is currently pumping about 10.5 million barrels per day and has said its production capacity is 12 million barrels per day. 

But sources told the Journal that Saudi Arabia would have difficulty sustaining an increase to 11 million for more than a few months at a time or a bump to 12 million for more than a few weeks.

The issues stem from maintenance needs, production slowdowns at some fields, and issues with pressure levels, the report said. 

Output briefly reached 12 million barrels per day in April 2020, the report added, before COVID-19 slammed demand and prices. But during the pandemic, Saudi Arabia reduced drilling, and ramping up quickly now risks long-term damage, it said.

The output concern comes after US President Joe Biden met with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman last week to push for more oil production.

He didn't secure a concrete pledge, with the oil cartel already on its own schedule for gradual increases. But OPEC has been falling short of meeting even those quotas, and its own outlook for 2023 predicted demand will outpace supply, unless it can boost production sharply.

Oil prices already face a tight outlook as the European Union phases in a partial ban on Russian oil that could take millions more barrels off the market. 

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia has boosted imports of Russian fuel oil to use for increased power generation, freeing up more of its own crude supply to export.

Longer term, Riyadh has said oil production capacity can reach 13 million barrels per day by 2027. But the crown price said in a speech last week that "the kingdom will not have any additional capacity to increase production" beyond that level.

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