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Sources say that OPEC+ will meet at 1300 GMT on Monday.

A panel of OPEC+ will meet online on Monday at 1300 GMT to discuss the market and review compliance with agreements. This is before Sunday's separate meeting of eight OPEC+ member countries to decide whether to increase oil production for September.

Two OPEC+ source confirmed that the time of the meeting of the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee on Monday, which will include top ministers of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies, led by Russia is one hour later than originally scheduled.

The JMMC is a two-monthly meeting that has the authority to call a full OPEC+ meeting to discuss market developments if necessary.

In a late Friday post on X, OPEC said that the committee did not have decision-making power over production levels and its role was limited to "monitoring conformity with production adjustment and reviewing overall market condition".

OPEC+ has cut production to support the oil market for many years. It reversed its course in order to regain the market share and when U.S. president Donald Trump asked OPEC to pump more oil to keep gasoline prices down.

Since April, eight members have increased their output. The most recent decision is to increase oil production by 548,000 barrels a day in August.

Three OPEC+ source said last week that the eight countries will hold a separate gathering on August 3. They are likely to agree on a further 548,000 bpd for September.

By September, OPEC+ will have undone its latest production cut of 2.2 millions bpd and the United Arab Emirates will have delivered a quota increase of 300,000 bpd ahead of schedule.

The oil prices are still holding up despite OPEC+'s production increases. This is due to the summer demand, and also because some members did not increase their production as much as was required by the headline quota increases. Brent crude traded at close to $69 per barrel on Monday. Reporting by Ahmad Ghaddar and Olesya Astakhova. Alex Lawler. Mark Potter edited the report.

(source: Reuters)