Monday, November 12, 2007

Saudi Arabia Pushes for Extra 500,000 bpd OPEC Hike

Saudi Arabia Pushes for Extra 500,000 bpd OPEC Hike
by Adam Smallman and Spencer Swartz
Nov 12th, 2007


Saudi Arabia is to push for an extra 500,000 barrels-a-day hike in output by OPEC, or 1.8%, as soon as this week if oil prices drive toward $100 a barrel, an official familiar with the situation said Monday.

Speaking the day after Saudi Arabia's Oil Minister Ali Naimi indicated that the 12-member Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries may discuss a production increase, an official close to the group's policy discussions told Dow Jones Newswires: "The Saudis want another 500,000 barrels a day in the market. They don't like these prices for consumers."

Leaders from the world's top oil producers will meet this weekend in Saudi Arabia's capital, Riyadh to discuss the challenges a potential global recession and an anemic dollar present to their estimated $1.8 billion a day in revenue.

Presidents, sheikhs and a king from the OPEC cartel, which meets more than 40% of the world's needs, are to discuss a raft of challenges to their core business, including soaring costs to projects, heightened environmental concerns that spur a push toward alternative energies, and what, if anything, they can do to prevent record oil prices from destabilizing the global economy.

Senior officials within the Saudi Arabian delegation have made it plain they don't feel comfortable with current oil prices, which have almost doubled from a low of $49.90 a barrel in January to a record $98.62 a barrel for U.S., light, sweet crude last week, and that something must be done.

In Kuwait Sunday, Naimi, OPEC's de facto leader, told reporters: "It is premature" to speak of a production hike, but "when OPEC meets, we will discuss this issue," though it was unclear if he was referring to this week's summit or formal OPEC policy talks by oil ministers due Dec. 5 in Abu Dhabi.

One sticking point is the timing of any such a move. The official said the timing would hinge on talks with other OPEC oil ministers, who will meet Thursday or Friday in a closed session ahead of the summit of heads of state in Riyadh at the weekend.

"If the market progresses (and rises above) $100 a barrel, I think the Saudis will push for something then and not wait until the December meeting," the official said.

But a source familiar with OPEC thinking said Monday that insiders "really don't want this summit to turn into an OPEC policy meeting" and senior officials "are not getting any indication that they'll do anything" this week. It was, the source added, perfectly possible that oil ministers might agree to something late this week.

OPEC Revenue

OPEC's revenue may climb 9% this year to $658 billion, the Financial Times reported Monday, citing the U.S. Energy Information Administration, but, with rising economic concerns driven by a worsening global credit crunch, it is oil and the associated costs of heating fuel and gasoline that some economists now say could be the trigger for a full scale economic meltdown.

But the oil leaders may have little wiggle room when it comes to averting such an event, as many believe a wall of investment cash, not constrained oil flows, lie behind the record prices. Any move to add, say, a million barrels a day of additional oil, or around 3% more than they currently pump, would eat into Saudi Arabia's spare capacity ahead of the worst of winter, and at a time of heightened concern over OPEC member Iran's nuclear program and the future stability of U.S. ally Pakistan.

OPEC members at their last meeting on Sept. 11 agreed to raise output by 500,000 barrels a day from Nov. 1, shared among the 10 members with production quotas, amid growing concerns high oil prices may adversely affect global economies and that demand could outstrip oil supplies as the northern hemisphere's energy consuming nations head into winter season.

According to estimates by Dow Jones Newswires, the OPEC-10 in October were already pumping roughly in line with their new target of 27.25 million barrels a day, with Iraq and Angola, which don't have quotas, pumping a further 3.9 million barrels a day.

"However, OPEC's announcement has not yet dampened upward price pressure, and it is unlikely that these higher volumes will be enough to halt the downward trend in commercial inventories over the next several months," the U.S. Energy Information Administration said.

Indeed, recent output hikes by OPEC have tended to be followed by record high oil prices as investors assume spare capacity is shrinking and demand will outstrip supply.

With no OPEC hike agreed this week, leaders, many of whom hold competing political views, may be forced into issuing a bland communiqué that insiders say seeks to reassure customers they are reliable suppliers of oil and are increasingly responsible toward the environment.


© 2007 Dow Jones Newswires.