Oil prices soar as fears increase on Iran
AFP
NEW
YORK
Petroleumworld.com
03 30 07
A
rise in tensions with Iran pushed crude oil prices to new 2007 highs
Thursday after the Islamic Republic decided against releasing a female
British sailor detained with 14 male colleagues.
New York's main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery
in May, surged 1.95 dollars to close at 66.03 dollars a barrel, topping
the 66-dollar mark for the first time since last September. The contract
traded at one point as high as 66.50 dollars.
In London, the price of Brent North Sea crude for May delivery, leapt
2.10 dollars to settle at 67.88 dollars a barrel. The intra-day peak
stood at 68.36 dollars.
Prices swung higher as a defiant Iran said it would not release as
promised the female sailor, Faye Turney, because of Britain's "incorrect"
attitude in an escalating crisis between the two countries.
Bache Financial trader Tony Machacek said in London: "The market
is just very nervous, so any sort of headline or rumor that suggests
that the situation between the West and Iran -- between Britain and
Iran -- might be getting worse is going to have a bullish impact on
prices."
Machacek added that the Iranian situation was overshadowing oil's
true demand-supply balance in the market.
Crude futures had Tuesday soared to six-month highs of 69 dollars
in London and 68.09 in New York on rumors of military conflict in
Iran. They fell back after the stories were unfounded.
The standoff over the British crew is the latest in a long crisis
between Iran and the West over efforts to halt Tehran's nuclear program
suspected of weapons development, which took a new turn when Iran
seized the sailors.
"Clearly, Iran is going to try and extract as much as it can
from this," said Mike Fitzpatrick, analyst at Fimat USA.
"Accordingly, don't look for the hostages to be released any
time soon. If this is the card they hope to use as leverage with the
Security Council, oil prices could move even higher as a result."
The announcement not to free the female sailor, made by the head of
Iran's supreme national security council Ali Larijani, came a day
after London froze ties with Tehran and despite the intervention of
UN chief Ban Ki-Moon.
After
Tehran refused to free her, London insisted that it was not seeking
a confrontation with Iran over its capture of British sailors.
Iran has insisted that the personnel it detained last week were in
Iranian waters. However British military officials have said the Britons
were 1.7 nautical miles (3.15 kilometers) inside Iraqi waters when
they were captured.
AFP
29 2011 GMT 03 07
Copyright© 2007 AFP. All
Rights Reserved.