Iranian Return to Oil Market Quicker Than Expected - IEA Official

© AP Photo / Vahid SalemiGeneral view of part of the Tehran's oil refinery south of the capital Tehran, Iran
General view of part of the Tehran's oil refinery south of the capital Tehran, Iran - Sputnik International
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Iran's return to the oil market turned out to be quicker than anticipated.

Workers repair pipes at the Yanlian Oil Refinery in Yan'an, 25 May 2005, north of Xian in western China's Shaanxi province - Sputnik International
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MOSCOW (Sputnik) — Iran's return to the global oil market turned out to be quicker than anticipated but it will not affect the market in 2017, Neil Atkinson, who is head of the International Energy Agency’s (IEA) Oil Industry & Markets Division, said Wednesday.

"The real numbers, we are starting to see, do suggest the pace of return has been a bit quicker than we anticipated but it is not that much quicker and I don't think it is affecting the balances materially for 2016. And there is an upper limit because Iran can only go back to where it was when sanctions were imposed," Atkinson told the Bloomberg media outlet.

He noted that Iran's return as an oil exporter is balanced by production declines in other countries.

"Don't forget that it has been offset to some extent by falls anywhere. For example, in Venezuela and Nigeria we have had a fall off earlier this year. So, yes, Iran is going up quicker but it has been offset by falls off elsewhere," Atkinson said.

He also added that the oil market is getting closer to equilibrium meaning prices will gradually increase.

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"We believe that the market is getting close to balance and we think in 2017 it will balance which implies prices will begin to recover, albeit it will recover very gradually… You can say there are brighter times ahead but it will be slow progress," Atkinson said.

Iran got the opportunity to resume oil trade since it reached an agreement with leading world powers, according to which it pledged to guarantee the peaceful nature of its nuclear activities in exchange for the sanctions against it being lifted.

In mid-January, the European Union and, in part, the United States, removed the economic sanctions imposed on Iran after the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) verified Tehran’s compliance with the nuclear agreement.

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