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Oil prices spike to record above $117
Foreign Desk Report
NEW YORK—Retail gas prices reached another new milestone Monday, jumping
to an average $3.50 a gallon at filling stations across the country.
Crude oil prices, meanwhile, kept setting records of their own, spiking
to a record above $117 a barrel Monday after a Japanese oil tanker was
attacked in the Middle East.
Diesel prices at the pump also struck a record high of $4.20 a gallon,
according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service.
Gas and diesel are expected to keep climing — gas because of the rise in
oil and because the summer driving season, when demand is at its
greatest, has yet to begin. And diesel, in demand throughout the world
because it is used to haul goods of all kinds, shows no signs of halting
its own advance.
The attack on the 150,000-ton tanker Takayama came about 270 miles off
the Yemen coast in the Gulf of Aden while it was heading for Saudi
Arabia, its Japanese operator, Nippon Yusen K.K., said in a statement
posted on its Web site. None of the ship’s 23 crew members was injured,
but several hundreds of gallons of fuel leaked before a 1-inch hole in
the tanker’s stern was repaired, the company said. Kyodo News agency
reported that the Japanese tanker was fired on by a rocket launcher from
a small boat.
Light, sweet crude for May delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange
rose to a record $117.40 a barrel but fell back to $116.63, down 6 cents
from Friday’s close. Oil prices had touched $117 on Friday before
slipping.
“There’s clearly some geopolitical tension in the market,” said Mark
Pervan, senior commodity strategist at the ANZ Bank in Melbourne,
Australia. “This will die down, but the market is pretty jittery at the
moment. Adding to the worries were claims Monday from the main militant
group in Nigeria’s restive south that it had launched two more attacks
on oil pipelines in the region. There was no immediate confirmation.
On Friday, oil prices rose to touch $117 for the first time after an
attack on a Royal Dutch Shell PLC pipeline by the Movement for the
Emancipation of the Niger Delta. Shell confirmed a pipeline leak that it
said appeared to have been caused by explosives. It said it had isolated
the line for repairs and that a small quantity of production had been
shut.
Attacks since early 2006 on Nigerian oil infrastructure by the militant
group have cut nearly one-quarter of the country’s normal petroleum
output, boosting oil prices. Nigeria is a major supplier of oil to the
U.S. Pervan said incidents such as the pipeline and tanker attacks were
“one-off” issues that didn’t really change the market. “They’re not
fundamental, they’re not going to be sustainable,” he said.
Comments over the weekend by an OPEC official that the group was not
likely to increase production also supported prices Monday. Abdalla
Salem el-Badri, secretary-general of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries, said Sunday that oil prices would likely go higher
and that the group was ready to raise production if the price pressure
was due to a shortage of supply — something he doubted.
“Oil prices, there is a common understanding that has nothing to do with
supply and demand,” el-Badri said on the sidelines of an energy
conference in Rome. Also over the weekend, Iran’s hard-line President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was quoted Saturday as saying crude oil prices at
$115 a barrel are too low, and that oil must “discover its real value.”
The Iranian president made the remarks during a visit to an oil and gas
exhibition in Tehran late Friday. In other Nymex trading, heating oil
futures rose 2.87 cents to $3.210 a gallon while gasoline prices rose
0.07 cents to $2.99 a gallon. Natural gas futures rose 9.7 cents to
$10.684 per 1,000 cubic feet.
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