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POL prices to scale up further
Staff Report
ISLAMABAD—OGRA has sent the summary to the prime minister and the
finance ministry for further increasing price of petrol by Rs 4 per
liter and price of high speed diesel by Rs 8 per liter. Sources told the
prime minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani will decide about enhancement in
the price of petroleum products or otherwise today in the light of the
summary from OGRA. Sources however ruled out any increase in the prices
of other petroleum products adding only nominal increase will be made in
the prices of petrol and high speed diesel.
Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) has forwarded a summary to the
Finance and Petroleum ministries proposing to increase the rate of high
speed diesel by Rs8 and petrol by Rs4 per litre. The summary has been
sent to raise the petroleum prices till May 15. It may be mentioned here
that the Federal Finance Minister, Ishaq Dar had rejected earlier the
proposal to raise furnace oil.
Oil prices hit a historic peak close to 120 dollars on Monday as energy
supplies were disrupted in Britain and Nigeria, traders said. New York’s
main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for June delivery, jumped
to 119.93 dollars on Monday, beating last Thursday’s previous peak of
119.90. The contract later stood at 118.92 dollars, up 40 cents from
Friday’s close.
London’s Brent North Sea crude for June rose 22 cents to 116.56 dollars
on Monday after striking an all-time high of 117.56 dollars on Friday.
“Crude hit record highs of 119.93 dollars amid supply disruptions in
Nigeria and the North Sea which have underpinned oil prices since Friday
and are likely to continue influencing the market in the short term,”
said Sucden analyst Nimit Khamar.
“In Nigeria, unidentified gunmen over the weekend killed five police
officers in the Niger Delta region, sparking concerns of further supply
disruption in the area,” Khamar noted. In Britain, a strike at a
Scottish refinery in Grangemouth, west of Edinburgh, has forced energy
giant BP to shut down the neighbouring Forties pipeline which supplies
40 percent of the country’s oil and gas.
Around 1,200 workers are staging a two-day walkout, which began on
Sunday, in a dispute over proposed changes to their pension rights. The
strike has sparked panic buying of motor fuel in parts of Britain. The
Forties pipeline brings more than 700,000 barrels of crude oil ashore
every day and supplies Britain and international markets. It cannot
function without power and steam from Grangemouth.
At the same time, Nigeria — Africa’s biggest crude producer — has also
been hit by industrial action. ExxonMobil’s Nigerian affiliate said
Monday that a 5-day strike by white collar employees had caused output
losses. A spokesman for Mobil Producing Nigeria (MPN) said the company
was attempting to open talks with the strikers. He would not disclose
the volume of the loss. Its production is normally about 780,000 barrels
per day.
Members of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of
Nigeria began the strike on Wednesday after pay and conditions
negotiations with the management stalled. Union officials had warned the
strike would “cripple exports.”. ExxonMobil is the second largest oil
company in Nigeria after Royal Dutch Shell.
Nigeria is Africa’s biggest producer with a daily output of 2.1 million
barrels but unrest in the oil-rich Niger Delta has cut exports by a
quarter since January 2006. Last week, Shell said it had reduced output
by 165,000 barrels per day following the sabotage of pipelines to the
Bonny export terminal in southern Nigeria.
Over the past two weeks, crude prices have smashed through a series of
record highs, sparking widespread international concern among consumer
nations. The market has also been supported by a weak dollar, tightening
global supplies and the OPEC cartel’s reluctance to raise output,
traders said. |