Energy-rich Azerbaijan refused on Tuesday to join global producers Saudi Arabia and Russia in freezing crude output to prevent a further slide in oil prices.
"We are not planning to freeze oil production," the Caspian nation's energy ministry said in a brief statement.
Saudi Arabia, Russia, Qatar, and Venezuela agreed to freeze oil output at January levels, in a bid to shore up prices after a 70 per cent drop due to chronic oversupply.
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However the agreement was conditional to other major producers joining in, and the effort to bring other producers on board may prove complicated.
Oil markets were hoping for a cut, and prices soon resumed their drop. In late London trading benchmark Brent crude oil was down 64 cents to $32.75 a barrel, while the main US contract, WTI, was down 0.43 cents to $29.01.
Ex-Soviet Azerbaijan's government has said it was expecting to produce this year 40.7 million tonnes of oil -- a 2.3-per cent decline compared to 2015.
Exports of hydrocarbons constitute up to three quarters of the Azerbaijan government's revenues, making the Caucasus country's economy highly dependent on global energy prices.
As oil prices have fallen to near 13-year lows the manna of petrodollars diminished, and Azerbaijan's once-booming economy quickly hit the skids, the national currency plummeted and inflation soared.