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OPEC not moving to ease high oil prices
Foreign Desk Report
VIENNA (Austria)—OPEC has virtually ruled out pumping more oil to ease
record-high prices, key oil ministers signaled Tuesday on the eve of a
cartel meeting. Chakib Khelil, president of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries, said the 13-nation group is shying away
from boosting production because of the U.S. economic slowdown,
political turmoil in the Middle East and expectations of slackening
global demand for crude.
On Monday, oil surpassed the all-time record of $103.76 a barrel when
adjusted for inflation. The previous record was $38, set in 1980 at the
height of the U.S.-Iran hostage crisis. Oil held steady well above $102
in Asia trading Tuesday after nearly hitting $104 a day earlier.
“Because of the economic slowdown in the United States — which is
affecting world economic growth and world demand on oil this year — I
don’t think OPEC will consider increasing its production,” Khelil told
reporters.
“Stocks are very high ... and we are going to have less demand in the
second part of the year.”
Pressure has mounted on OPEC to raise output, which could help pull down
prices which have hovered above $100 for weeks. Since demand typically
eases in the second quarter, however, OPEC was widely expected to take
no action at Wednesday’s meeting in Vienna.
“Politically, OPEC should increase output. But I think what they will
actually do is nothing,” said John Hall, of John Hall Associates in
London. Hall said one option would be to authorize Khelil to order an
output increase or decrease in the coming weeks — a gesture that would
reassure jittery oil markets. OPEC’s advisory committee, which makes
recommendations to the entire cartel, planned to meet Tuesday afternoon.
Khelil held open the possibility of some kind of intervention Tuesday.
He spoke after talks with Oil Minister Ali Naimi of Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s
top producing nation and its most influential member. Kuwait and Libya
are among OPEC members who have said the cartel should maintain its
current output, estimated at about 29.7 million barrels a day — roughly
40 percent of daily world demand.
However, Iran and Venezuela — both hawkish on prices — have pressed for
a cut in output. Analysts said it was doubtful that the rest of OPEC
would go along. “A cut would have to be a consensus,” said Rafel
Ramirez, Venezuela’s oil minister, contending any increase “would make
no sense.”
“Global markets are well supplied,” Iranian Oil Minister Gholam Hussein
Nozari said Tuesday, saying the weak U.S. currency is a greater concern.
Ramirez sees $90 a barrel as the long-term floor and suggested OPEC is
determined not to allow prices to dip below level.
Yet the pricing trend has been up, not down. Oil shot up 19 percent in
February as tensions in the Middle East increased.
Also supporting prices was a Turkish incursion into Iraq and the weak
dollar. Reducing output now “would remove a bullet from their arsenal
which could be used more effectively at a latter stage if prices begin
to fall,” said Johannes Benigni, managing director of JBC Energy in
Vienna.
“There’s been a lot of suggestion about a cut, but I don’t think we
would support that based on what’s happening with prices,” said
Nigeria’s energy minister, Odein Ajumogobia. The 13 OPEC members are
Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Venezuela. Iraq is the
only member not subject to the cartel’s output quotas.
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