Bolivia

Venezuela

Trinidad
&
Caribbean

 








Very usefull links




 

OPEC has no option but to maintain output at current prices:Libya


Platts
Paris
Petroleumworld.com 06 16 06

Libya's top oil official Thursday said oil producers' cartel OPEC has no
option but to leave current crude production levels unchanged while prices
hover close to $70/bbl.

"We won't cut the production while prices are at these levels. We don't
want to see the world economy disrupted or affected. We will not accentuate
the problem by cutting the production," National Oil Corporation Chairman
Shokri Ghanem said Thursday.

Ghanem said prices were not being driven by fundamental factors but
instead by political tensions.

"I think prices at these levels are once again because of the
uncertainity in the Middle East, Iran and Iraq. But still there is a
contradiction in the market because there is more supply than demand and
prices still haven't gone down. But we hope prices will stabilize," Ghanem
told Platts in a telephone interview.

Abdullah al-Attiyah, Qatar's oil minister, said Tuesday that while there
was "no magic number" for oil prices at which OPEC would trim output quotas,
he believes the cartel would continue to pump all out so long as price were
higher than $50/barrel.

"At $60/barrel we will not cut," he told reporters following a speech to
the US chamber of Commerce here. He said that OPEC would continue to produce
at current levels even if prices dipped to $$50-$55/barrel.

Attiyah said that OPEC remains worried about the "ups and downs of the
market," which have a negative effect on economies. "We'd like to see a stable
oil price," he said.

OPEC president Edmund Daukoru last week said the group is committed to
long-term oil price stability and is greatly concerned about current high oil
prices which do not reflect fundamentals of supply and demand.

Speaking at the OPEC/EU meeting in Brussels, Daukoru attributed the
current high prices to "refinery tightness, geopolitical developments and
speculative activity."

OPEC was particularly worried about price volatility, he said. "The
situation concerns us greatly," he said. "Fundamentals are in balance and
stock levels are comfortable."

Crude oil rose for a second day following Wednesday's reports of an
unexpectedly large fall in US crude oil inventories. The benchmark Brent crude
contract was trading at $67.63/barrel at 1103 gmt, up 65 cts on Wednesday's
$66.98/barrel settle.

OPEC ministers next meet September 11 in Vienna.

--Jacinta Moran, jacinta_moran @platts.com

For more OPEC news, visit Platts OPEC Guide at
http://www.platts.com/Oil/Resources/News%20Features/opec/index.xml



Platts 16 06 06

Copyright ©2006 Platts. All Rights Reserved.

 

Send this story to a friend

Your feedback is important to us!

We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.

Write to editor@petroleumworld.com

Any question or suggestions, please write to:
editor@petroleumworld.com





Best Viewed with IE 5.01+
Windows NT 4.0, '95, '98 and ME +/ 800x600 pixels

 


Contact:
editor@petroleumworld.com/phones:(58 412) 996 3730 or 952 5301
www.petroleumworld.com-Editor:Elio Ohep /
Publisher-Producer:Elio Ohep.
Contact Email:
editor@petroleumworld.com
Legal Information. CopyRight © 2002, Elio Ohep.- All rights reserved

This site is a public free site and it contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner.We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of business, environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have chosen to view the included information for research, information, and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission fromPetroleumworld or the copyright owner of the material.