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Kazakhstan oil supply disruption is afoot

Brent crude oil prices rose on Tuesday, adding to gains made in the previous session. A drone attack on a pumping station for an oil pipeline in Russia reduced the flow of oil from Kazakhstan. However, gains were limited by the prospect that supply would soon increase.

Brent crude futures rose 15 cents or 0.2% to $75.37 a barrel at 0454 GMT.

The U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude Futures rose 67 cents to $71.41 per barrel from the close on Friday. Due to Presidents' Day, there was no WTI settlement on Monday.

The main driver of oil prices in recent months has been supply expectations. News of a drone attack on Kazakhstan's pipeline export in Russia, coupled with the recent weakness in oil prices, has triggered a shift in bearish sentiment.

Caspian Pipeline Consortium, which operates the pipeline, said that the drone strike at Kropotkinskaya in southern Krasnodar reduced shipments of western firms such as Exxon Mobil and Chevron from Kazakhstan to global markets.

Two sources familiar with the plan said that it would not change for February.

According to recent economic data, the outlook for demand, especially from China, remains uncertain.

BMI analysts stated in a report that they expect Brent prices to average $76 per barrel in 2025. This is a 5% decrease from the average of 2024, due to market oversupply and tensions in trade.

According to a Russian report, OPEC+ producers do not plan to delay a series monthly increases in oil supply scheduled to start in April.

Due to weak demand in December and increased supply outside of the group, OPEC pushed back a planned increase in output until April.

The markets were also watching to see if the peace talks between Russia and Ukraine would bear fruit when U.S. officials and Russian officials met for talks later in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday.

The biggest factor in the crude oil market is the outcome of the Ukraine negotiations. The analyst at Sparta Commodities, Neil Crosby, said that Russian oil could partially return to the legal market. However there are many possibilities as to what the final result will be. (Reporting and editing by Michael Perry, Sonali Paul and Colleen Waye)

(source: Reuters)