In its latest oil market report, the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries said its members last month reduced output by 890,000 barrels per day according to secondary sources.
The International Energy Agency said last week that the initial rate of compliance with a landmark deal to reduce the global oil glut was 90 per cent.
The deal, agreed last year and in effect since January, called for the OPEC cartel and some non-OPEC countries to reduce output by about 1.8 million barrels per day (mb/d).
"Production adjustments by OPEC and some non-OPEC producers supported the market, although gains were capped by increased drilling activity in the US," it said.
Also Read
Among OPEC members, crude output decreased the most in Saudi Arabia, Iraq and the United Arab Emirates, while Nigeria, Libya and Iran increased production.
The world's total oil supply fell by 1.29 mb/d in January, OPEC said citing preliminary data. OPEC's share in total production stood at 33.5 per cent.
This means the world's oil markets will continue to rebalance, OPEC predicted.
"In 2017, oil demand growth is assumed to remain healthy with potential growth estimated at 1.2 mb/d, well above the ten-year average of 1.0 mb/d," the organisation said.
Main factors supporting the scenario are strong global economic growth, solid demand from the road transport sector, and expectations for high vehicle sales in the US, Europe, China and India.
Dampening demand will be progress made in fuel efficiency, potential reduction in subsidies for oil purchases and switches to other fuels, OPEC said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content