Saudi Arabia commended Iraq for implementing almost all its pledged oil-production cuts and Nigeria told the kingdom it was committed to hitting its target, in further signs that disputes among OPEC+ members over cheating of quotas are being resolved. Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz Bin Salman spoke to his Iraqi counterpart Ihsan Abdul Jabbar, according to a joint statement from their offices on Monday. The prince said he was satisfied with Baghdad’s improved compliance in June.

Iraq, Nigeria and other nations such as Angola have came under fire from Saudi Arabia and Russia — the effective leaders of the OPEC+ alliance — for over-production. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies agreed in April to cut supply by almost 10 million barrels a day to prop up prices in the face of the coronavirus pandemic.

Output cut to the lowest since 1991 to shore up oil market

Last month, OPEC produced 22.7 million barrels a day, the lowest amount in almost three decades.

Iraq, OPEC’s biggest producer after Saudi Arabia, implemented almost 90% of its pledged supply curbs in June and will reach full compliance at the beginning of August, it said in the statement.

OPEC+ will hold a video conference on Wednesday to review the deal. Delegates have suggested they will stick with a plan to begin tapering their historic output reductions in August.