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Qatar wants
oil prices above $100
DUBAI—Qatar’s energy minister said crude oil prices, which have surged
recently to record levels above 80 dollars a barrel, should be more than
100 dollars.
“If we take into account inflation from 1972 to the present day, the
real and fair price for oil should be more than 100 dollars,” Abdullah
bin Hamad Al-Attiyah said in remarks aired by Al-Jazeera television on
Tuesday.
He said such a price was justified by rising inflation, a fall in
purchasing power and the weakness of the dollar, which has dropped about
10 percent in value against the euro over the past year.
His comments contradict those of OPEC chief Abdalla Salem el-Badri who
said in September that current prices around 80 dollars did not reflect
fundamentals and were unlikely to last long at that level.
On Tuesday, world oil prices continued their fall in Asian trade, with
New York’s main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in
November, 17 cents lower at 78.85 dollars per barrel in afternoon trade.
The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) decided last
month to increase its output by 500,000 barrels from November 1 to help
ease prices and send a signal that the cartel cared about consumer
countries. OPEC is due to meet again in Abu Dhabi on December 5.
Attiyah, whose gas-rich nation is an OPEC member, said the dollar could
remain the unit of reference for oil despite its slump. “But I cannot
predict what will happen in future. Anything is possible,” he
said.—Agencies
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