Petroleum
News: OPEC likely to cut output for 2nd quarter:
Week of January 01, 2006 The
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries is
likely to reduce its crude-oil production after
the high-demand Northern Hemisphere winter, the
group’s president said Dec. 22.
“I expect OPEC to decrease output for the
second quarter,” Sheikh Ahmad Fahad Al-Ahmad
Al-Sabah said, adding that the group isn’t
expected to change its production policy for the
first quarter.
His remarks, made during a one-day visit
to Beijing to meet with top Chinese policy
makers, are the latest hint from OPEC of its
concerns that oil demand will fall after winter,
bringing prices down.
Al-Sabah is in Beijing with OPEC’s acting
secretary-general Adnan Shihab-Eldin on an
official visit to try to further deepen dialogue
between oil producers and consumers. China is
the world’s second-biggest consumer of oil and
third-biggest importer.
Light, sweet crude for February delivery
on the New York Mercantile Exchange traded up 69
cents at $59.25 a barrel after the news.
On Dec. 12, OPEC agreed to keep current
production unchanged, although ministers have
indicated they stand ready to cut back if needed
at a meeting scheduled for Jan. 31 in Vienna.
The group’s official quota stands at 28
million barrels a day, the highest in its
history, and applies to the 10 active members,
excluding Iraq.
Al-Sabah, who made several Asian stops
last year in his capacity as Kuwait Energy
Minister, will hand over the OPEC presidency to
Nigeria’s Oil Minister Edmund Daukoru on Jan. 1.
—The Associated Press |