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Energy
Key Facts
—The decision. OPEC and its allies agreed to raise output targets by 188,000 barrels a day from August.
—The trend. It is the latest in a run of monthly hikes, restoring nearly 800,000 barrels a day since April.
—The trigger. The Strait of Hormuz is reopening after the conflict that had choked Gulf oil exports for months.
—The price. Crude has slid back toward pre-conflict levels, with US oil trading below seventy dollars a barrel.
—The split. Cheaper oil helps fuel-importing economies but squeezes big regional exporters.
A decision taken by a handful of oil ministers on a video call this weekend ripples all the way to Latin America. The latest rise in OPEC oil output is pushing prices down, and the region is split between winners and losers.
For a reader far from the oil markets, the basic story is simple. OPEC and its allies, the group known as OPEC+, control a large share of global supply, and they have just decided to pump a little more.
The move is modest on paper but part of a pattern. According to the group’s statement reported by Al Jazeera, seven core members will raise output targets by 188,000 barrels a day from August.
Why OPEC oil output is rising now
The timing is tied to the end of a crisis. For months, the war involving Iran effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow sea lane through which much of the world’s oil passes, keeping real exports far below official quotas.
Now that chokepoint is easing. As tankers return to the strait, the barrels the group had promised on paper are finally reaching the market, and the extra supply is pulling prices down.
The group is also changing shape. The United Arab Emirates left OPEC earlier this year, and Iraq has been pressing for a larger quota, so the seven remaining core producers are managing supply through a delicate balance.
The market reaction has been clear. Crude has slid back toward the levels seen before the conflict, with the US benchmark trading below seventy dollars a barrel and analysts warning of a near-term glut.
What it means for Latin America
The region does not sit on one side of this trade. It contains both major oil exporters and economies that import nearly every drop they burn, so a falling price helps some and hurts others.
The exporters feel the squeeze. For producers such as Brazil, Mexico, Colombia and fast-rising Guyana, lower crude prices mean thinner revenues for state oil firms and, in several cases, tighter government budgets.
The importers get relief. Much of Central America and the Caribbean buys all its fuel abroad, so cheaper oil eases import bills, softens inflation and takes pressure off currencies that had been strained by the earlier price spike.
For anyone with money in the region, the read is nuanced. Energy-heavy stocks and oil-linked currencies may cool, while fuel-importing economies could see a modest boost, so the direction of the bet depends on which country you are watching.
Brazil offers the clearest illustration of the tension. Its state oil company is a market heavyweight, so softer crude trims its earnings, yet cheaper fuel at the pump can ease the inflation that shapes central-bank decisions.
Mexico faces a similar knot. Lower prices pressure its national oil firm and public finances, but the country also imports large volumes of refined fuel, which softens part of the blow to households.
The wider lesson is about volatility. After a year of war-driven price spikes and now a supply-driven slide, the swing shows how exposed the region remains to events far beyond its borders, from the Gulf to a video call among ministers.
Frequently Asked Questions
What did the OPEC oil output decision involve?
OPEC and its allies agreed to raise output targets by 188,000 barrels a day from August. It is the latest in a series of monthly increases that have restored close to 800,000 barrels a day of supply since April.
Why are oil prices falling?
Prices are falling because the Strait of Hormuz is reopening after the conflict that had blocked Gulf exports. As real barrels return to the market alongside the fresh OPEC increases, supply is rising faster than demand.
Is cheaper oil good or bad for Latin America?
It depends on the country. Lower prices help fuel importers in Central America and the Caribbean, but they hurt exporters such as Brazil, Mexico, Colombia and Guyana by cutting oil revenues and pressuring budgets.
View original source — Rio Times ↗