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Opec heavyweights back production cut

By Carola Hoyos in Vienna and Javier Blas in Madrid
Published: March 30 2004 0:56 | Last Updated: March 30 2004 15:07

Leading oil producer Saudi Arabia and Venezuela, another heavyweight 
in the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries, lined up on 
Tuesday to support the implementation of 1m barrels per day of 
production cuts in April.

Their oil ministers were joined by peers from Algeria and Libya, 
suggesting the weight of opinion is behind the surprise cut agreed in 
February due to fears that seasonal demand falls, combined with US 
stockbuilding, could create a price collapse in the second quarter.

Kuwait believes the cut should be delayed. Although prices are 
currently at nominal levels not seen for a decade, the weakness of 
the dollar in which oil is priced means oil producer treasuries are 
reaping only part of the benefit.

An Iraqi proposal that Opec ministers should reconvene in May to 
assess the market might provide room for a compromise, with the cut 
going ahead but being re-evaluated after only a few weeks.

Saudi Arabia confirmed on Tuesday that it would push the Organisation 
of Petroleum Exporting Countries to cut output despite some members' 
opposition and high oil prices.

Ali Naimi, Saudia Arabia's energy minister, late on Monday told 
Felipe Calder—n, his Mexican counterpart, that the market looked 
over-supplied and that the kingdom feared a serious price drop in the 
coming months if the oil cartel did not act immediately, people close 
to the meeting said.

People present at the meeting said that they interpreted Mr Naimi's 
position as being opposed to the idea of postponing the 1m barrel a 
day reduction in Opec's quota decided in Algiers last month. But Opec 
on Tuesday will negotiate the details of its decision and a final 
announcement is expected on Wednesday.

Hedge funds have already begun to liquidate their long positions.

Mr Naimi said that oil prices had fallen and that oil inventories in 
the US had risen since the meeting in Algiers.

Saudi Arabia is by far Opec's most influential member and its 
position is likely to be unwelcome in Washington. Fearing that high 
petrol prices this summer could become a political liability ahead of 
the presidential elections in November, the administration of 
President George W. Bush has begun pressing producing countries not 
to reduce supplies.

Also at the meeting, Saudi Arabia asked Mexico to co-operate with 
Opec but Mexico said it wanted Opec to act first.

"Mexico's position is they [Opec] have said a lot, but implemented 
little," said a person with knowledge of the meeting.

He added that Mexico, which is not a member of Opec, had co-operated 
with Opec in the past five years, though not on the last two 
occasions the cartel said it would cut output.

Mexico's involvement is important to Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. Both 
compete with it to supply oil to the US, the world's largest 
consumer, and do not want to lose market share.

Saudi Arabia and other Opec members fear a drop in demand for heating 
oil in the west as spring progresses.

Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest exporter, is trying to keep 
inventories held by companies in consuming countries as low as 
possible.

It is a policy that in the past year has narrowed the gap between 
supply and demand, strengthening Opec's grip on the market.

Angola, Oman and Norway, other key suppliers that have in the past 
co-operated with Opec, are also unlikely to heed the cartel's call to 
cut supplies this time.

At its February meeting, in Algiers, Opec, which supplies about 38 
per cent of the world's oil, decided to reduce its quota output by 1m 
barrels a day, to 23.5m b/d as of April 1, but said it could 
reconsider the issue at tomorrow's meeting if prices stayed high.

The cartel also promised said it would to cut 1.5m b/d of oil it was 
supplying above its quota, but did not fully deliver as prices 
remained well above $30.

Brent futures were slow to react on Tuesday, but by mid morning were 
up 21 cents to $31.95 a barrel, while Nymex crude was up 35 cents in 
pre-market electronic trade to $35.80 a barrel.



>Hi MM
>
> >(I copied and pasted the link and story about 5 paragraphs below)
> >
> >I wonder why this is happening, and now?  It is, in a way, welcome,
> >because it is overdue that some countries (America and others) wake up
> >to their complacency and the pipelines they've been maintaining for
> >massive rivers of money to flow to nations in return for rivers of
> >oil.
>
>That's not always how it works. For quite a lot of countries it turns
>out to be a massive river of impoverishment and environmental
>wreckage. Eg.:

<snip>



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