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Saudi oil production will be fully back online by the end of September, the kingdom’s energy minister, Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, told the media during a news conference in Jeddah on Tuesday, sending oil prices down by more than 6% just a day after their biggest jump in history.
The world’s largest crude oil processing facility and the heartbeat of Saudi Arabia’s energy industry was targeted in drone and missile attacks early Saturday morning that knocked out more than half of the OPEC kingpin’s global daily exports.
Fifty percent of the crude production cut from the attack has been restored in the past two days, bin Salman said, adding that production capacity would reach 11 million barrels of crude per day (bpd) by the end of September and 12 million bpd by the end of November.
The kingdom’s crude exports won’t decrease, the minister said — rather, inventory stocks will be drawn down in order to meet export commitments.
“We are in the process to bring back oil refining to full capacity,” bin Salman said. “The company will honor all of its commitments to its customers this month by drawing from its reserves of crude oil and further modified some of its oil until the production capacity of the country is up to 11 million barrels a day by the end of September and up to 12 million barrels in November.”
Preparations for Saudi state oil giant Aramco’s highly anticipated initial public offering will also continue apace, Aramco Chairman Yasir al-Rumayyan said, sitting beside the energy minister.
“The IPO is a commitment by the shareholder, the government of Saudi Arabia, and we think the IPO will continue as is, we are not going to stop anything,” al-Rumayyan said. “This would make us even be firm when it comes to taking the company public, so I think anytime in the coming 12 months we’ll be ready as per the market opportunity.”
The kingdom reportedly plans to list 1% of Aramco on its local stock exchange before the end of this year and another 1% in 2020 as first steps ahead of a public sale of roughly 5% of the company, which is the largest in the world.
Attacks threaten global oil supply
Abqaiq in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern province and the nearby Khurais oil field, Saudi Arabia’s second largest, suffered fire damage on Saturday that shut off 5.7 million barrels of daily crude production. That represents more than half of the kingdom’s global daily exports and around 5% of the world’s daily crude oil production.
Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser, speaking at the news conference, emphasized that despite the oil attack being “huge,” the company was able to restore capacity.
“We have enough oil products to supply the local market,” Nasser said, adding that Aramco would compensate local refineries with additional feed in the next few days.
Abqaiq is the world’s largest oil processing facility and crude oil stabilization plant with a processing capacity of more than 7 million bpd. Khurais has capacity to pump around 1.5 million bpd. Ten fires at the Abqaiq facility were put out in seven hours, Nasser said.
“Where would you find a company in the whole world that went through such a devastating attack and came out like a phoenix?” bin Salman asked the audience. He was met with applause.
In August, Saudi Arabia produced 9.85 million bpd, significantly below an output cut target it had coordinated with other OPEC members and non-OPEC countries to boost crude prices in a global low-demand environment.
The geopolitical risk premium has returned to markets, industry experts say, which some believe will usher in a more bullish longer-term outlook due to the immediate need to draw down on crude stockpiles. The price outlook, and investor confidence in Aramco’s highly anticipated initial public offering — which would be the biggest in history — depends heavily on how quickly the Saudis can restore full production capacity.
A lead analyst from S&P Global told CNBC on Monday that the attack had effectively wiped out the world’s spare oil capacity.
While Yemen’s Houthi rebels, who have been at war with the Saudis since 2015, claimed responsibility for the attack, numerous officials and analysts point to Tehran. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo via Twitter blamed Iran for the attack, saying “Iran has now launched an unprecedented attack on the world’s energy supply. There is no evidence the attacks came from Yemen.”
Tehran replied by calling the claims “meaningless” and “pointless.”
Correction: The headline was revised to correct that the Saudi energy minister said full oil production will be restored by the end of September. An earlier headline misstated when he said it would be fully restored.