The walkout by thousands of staff of Kuwait Petroleum Corp. And its subsidiaries on Sunday in a dispute over planned pay cuts had slashed the emirate's output from 3.0 million barrels per day to 1.5 million and prompted a brief rally in world prices.
But today the Kuwait Oil Workers Union announced that its members were returning to work after what it called an "extremely successful" strike that had made the government pay attention to their concerns.
At around 0730 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for May delivery was down 99 cents, or 2.41 per cent at USD 40.09 a barrel while Brent crude for June fell 98 cents, 2.23 per cent, to USD 43.05.
KPC spokesman Sheikh Talal Khaled Al-Sabah said that staff were already returning to work in response to the union's call and that operations at the company's installations were resuming.
The climbdown by the union came after an appeal by acting oil minister Anas al-Saleh on Tuesday night for staff to return to work so that negotiations could be held on their demands.
"We cannot sit at the negotiating table while the strike is still going on. Return to work and come and negotiate," he told the private Al-Rai satellite television.
Al-Jarida newspaper said worker representatives were expected to meet Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Mubarak Al-Sabah on Wednesday for talks on resolving the dispute.
"In respect for the emir and in loyalty to him... We have decided to cancel the total strike," said a union statement posted on its official Twitter account.
"We trust the emir... For the protection of the rights of oil workers.
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