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Saudis warn of shortfalls
as oil hits $61
By Carola Hoyos and
Neil Dennis in London
Published: July 6 2005 22:02 | Last updated: July 6 2005 22:02
Oil
prices hit new record highs above $61 a barrel on Thursday, driven
by short-term supply fears as the first hurricane of the season
threatened crude production and refinery operations in the Gulf of
Mexico.
But private
warnings also point to a worsening long-term outllook, with Saudi
officials saying that the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries will be unable to meet projected western demand in 10 to
15 years.
At today's prices,
the world will need the cartel to boost its production from 30m to
50m barrels a day to 50m by 2020 to meet rapidly rising demand,
according to the International Energy Agency, the energy watchdog
for consuming countries.
But senior Saudi
energy officials have privately warned US and European counterparts
that Opec would have an "extremely difficult time" meeting that
demand. Saudi Arabia calculates there is a 4.5m b/d gap between what
the world needs and what the kingdom can provide.
Saudi Arabia has
the world's largest oil reserves and will need to bear up to half
Opec's production growth in the next 10 to 20 years, with the rest
mainly coming from Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates.
Saudi Arabia pumps
9.5m b/d and has assured consumer countries that it could reach
12.5m b/d in 2009 and probably 15m b/d eventually. But a senior
western energy official said: "They said it would be extremely
difficult to move above that figure".
But European
officials hope that energy saving measures could curb oil demand.
They believe Opec could produce the 44m b/d the world would need if
consumers adopted efficiency measures under discussion by
governments in the US and Europe.
G8 leaders are
expected to discuss the high oil prices during their three day
summit which began in Gleneagles, Scotland, on Wednesday.
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Oil prices at
new high as storms threaten supply
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Fears that US
refineries are ill-equipped to meet winter demand for heating oil
and other distillates have driven crude prices more than 9 per cent
higher in the last week.
These concerns were
compounded on Wednesday as Chevron, Shell and BP all reported they
were evacuating workers from platforms in the Gulf of Mexico as
tropical storm Dennis was upgraded to hurricane.
These concerns were
compounded on Wednesday as Chevron, Shell and BP all reported they
were evacuating workers from platforms in the Gulf of Mexico as
tropical storm Dennis was upgraded to hurricane
The August West
Texas Intermediate contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange hit
a record $61.63 in early electronic trade, while on London's
International Petroleum Exchange, the front-month Brent crude
contract climbed to an all-time high of $60.26 a barrel. |