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Oil prices settle higher on force majeure at Kazakh field, slow Venezuela exports

The oil prices rose 0.5% on Wednesday, as a result of optimism about tighter supplies after a temporary closure at two large Kazakh fields and the low volume?of Venezuelan oil exports that highlighted slow progress towards reversing production cuts in South America.

Brent futures rose 32 cents or 0.5% to $65.24 per barrel. The U.S. West Texas intermediate crude contract rose by 26 cents or 0.4% to $60.62 per barrel. Both contracts closed 1.5% higher than the previous session, after OPEC+ member Kazakhstan?halted production at its Tengiz oilfields and Korolev on Sunday because of power distribution problems. Four industry sources said on Wednesday that oil from the vast Kashagan fields was diverted for the first to the domestic market due to bottlenecks at the Black Sea CPC Terminal after drone attacks seriously damaged equipment. According to a letter from TCO, the operator of Tengiz Oilfield has declared force majeure on crude oil deliveries in the 'CPC pipeline system. On Tuesday, three industry sources were quoted as saying that oil production could be stopped at two Kazakh fields for seven to ten days. PDVSA vessel tracking data and documents showed that the volume of Venezuelan crude oil exported to the U.S. under the $2 billion deal reached 7.8 million barrels Wednesday. This highlights the slow progress?that has prevented state-run oil companies from fully reversing the recent production cuts. A preliminary poll on Tuesday showed that U.S. crude and gasoline stocks were likely to have increased by about 1.7m barrels in the last week, while distillate stockpiles are expected to be down. In its latest oil market report on Wednesday, the International Energy Agency revised higher its 2026 global oil consumption growth forecasts. This suggests a slight reduction in surpluses for this year.

Analyst Giovanni Staunovo at UBS said that the increased geopolitical risks, which put pressure on oil markets because?tariffs might slow economic growth, led to a risk-off attitude.

The American Petroleum Institute will release its weekly inventory figures at 4:30 pm EST on Wednesday. Government data will be released on Thursday at 12 noon EST, a day after due to the U.S. federal holidays on Monday. Reporting by Stephanie Kelly, Katya Glubkova, and Emily Chow, in London; Editing by Mark Potter. Kirsten Donovan. Elaine Hardcastle. Paul Simao. Rod Nickel.

(source: Reuters)