Oil prices could rise above $50 a barrel should Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) come to an agreement to cut oil production on Wednesday. After reaching a preliminary agreement in Algiers in September to cap oil output around 32.5-33 million barrels per day, experts are expecting members of the cartel to thrash out a new agreement which will further cub supply. But rather than looking to boost the oil price, analysts say that OPEC should be looking to achieve a sustainable oil price that avoids the lows seen in February 2016 of $26 per barrel. Sean Evers, Managing Director at Gulf Intelligence, said member states needed to exceed the Algiers agreement.
Sean Evers Managing Director at Gulf Intelligence

UAE–South Korea CEPA comes into force on May 1
Meraas awards AED 2.4 billion in construction contracts for 'The Acres'
Bangladesh set to sign Boeing jet deal, shifting from Airbus
UAE Circular Economy Council focuses on food security, sustainable growth
UAE announces decision to withdraw from OPEC and OPEC+
