14 Jan 2009 Emirates 24|7
 

CEOs suggest Opec temporarily stop oil production to up prices

  • Text size
  •  
  •  

As one of the most prominent oil cuts in history (2.2m barrels a day) and the Gaza strife fail to lift oil prices, the CEOs of companies dealing in commodities are calling for desperate measures including "OpecOpecLoading... stopping production for a while".

Return of the Chinese buyers to the markets in February, 'strategic' inventory build-up by countries like the US and some substantial measures taken by the US administration to invigorate the economy are the three factors that can propel the moribund oil prices industry, insiders say.

"We have expectations from the Obama administration assuming charge in the US in a week's time. A high demand in US does have the ability to drive the oil markets," Salem Abdulrahman Al Wehaibi a senior Qatar Petroleum official, told Emirates Business on the sidelines of Offshore Arabia, oil industry meet yesterday..

The comments come as oil prices went down below $37 a barrel, on expectations crude demand will weaken amid a severe global economic slowdown. Brent crude oil for delivery in February dropped 19 cents to $42.72 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange yesterday. Crude prices have fallen more than 25 per cent since reaching just above $50 a barrel last week.

Top company officials point out that companies are hoarding oil in super tankers across the world in order to make the most out of subsiding oil prices. "There is news that 20 supertankers have been chartered by oil companies to store oil," said Kelvin S Corry the Chief Executive of Makello commodities.

Another company CEO suggested that the OpecOpecLoading..., which meet more than 40 per cent of the world's oil needs hold production for a while. "That seems the only measure that may work," he said. Though such a step seems infeasible, it did inflate oil prices back in 1973 when OpecOpecLoading... imposed an embargo.

A regular inflow of banal economic news has ensured that oil prices remain low, an economist said. "Developments like the Gaza strife and the OpecOpecLoading... cuts have been largely counter-balanced by continuing poor economic news," said Robin Mills a Dubai-based petroleum economist. Mills said a sufficient capacity of 5 million bbl/day of spare capacity worldwide has the potential of subliming OpecOpecLoading... cuts.

China and the US are major economies that can drive up prices, Mills said. "Recent announcements that China and the US are going to fill their strategic reserves are positive for prices, but Chinese demand is a key factor to watch."

Cleaning up
Companies working on oil spills clean-up cite 2008 as one of their best years in history and affirm that they have enjoyed stable growth when oil prices tumbled to one fourth of their value.

"There were 36 oil spills in 2008 and it was a busy year," said Rob Self Regional Manager, Middle East with Oil Spill Response Limited. "Last year was a fairly good year," said Stuart Duncanson, Director (Commercial Sales) with Markleen a Spain based company.

The industry continues to grow in three tiers, says Bill Fernie the Managing Director of Ayles Fernie International Limited. "There are the oil majors having subsidiaries to handle oil spills. Then there are large companies with strong infrastructure. And small companies with the niche areas of specialisation."

By Shashank Shekhar

© Emirates Business 24/7 2009
x DISCLAIMER

Zawya is a distributor (and not a publisher) of content supplied by third parties and subscribers. Any opinions, advice, statements, services, offers, or other information or content expressed or made available by those third parties, including information providers, subscribers or other users of the Service, are those of the respective author(s) or distributor(s) and not of the Company. The Company neither endorses nor is responsible for the accuracy or reliability of any opinion, advice or statement made on the Service by anyone other than authorized Service employee spokespersons while acting in their official capacities. The Company is not responsible for any infringement of intellectual property rights or breach of any applicable law or regulation, including regulation in relation to financial services or the distribution of financial products, defamation, data protection, telecommunications (including regulations relating to excessive use, spamming or other abusive activities) or obscene, offensive or illegal content). Under no circumstances will the Company be liable for any loss or damage caused by a member's reliance on information obtained through the Service. It is the responsibility of member to evaluate the accuracy, completeness or usefulness of any information, opinion, advice or other content available through the Service. Please seek the advice of professionals, as appropriate, regarding the evaluation of any specific information, opinion, advice or other content.

Read the full Member Agreement
http://www.zawya.com/legal/NewsLetter.cfm?name=disclaimer
Access to this article is subject to specific terms and condition.
 
 

Post a Comment

 
  • Comment Title (optional)
  • Express your views or tell us more about this article
  • First Name
  • Last Name
  • Email Address
  • Company Name (optional)
Leave this field empty
 
 
Zawya Comment Policy
 
  1. Zawya encourages you to add a comment to this discussion. You agree that when you add content to this discussion your comments will not:
    1.1   Contain any material which is libelous or defamatory of any person, is obscene, offensive, hateful or inflammatory or causes damage to the reputation of any person or organisation.
    1.2   Promote sexually explicit material, violence, discrimination based on race, sex, religion, nationality, disability, sexual orientation or age or any illegal activity.
    1.3   Be made in breach of any legal duty owed to a third party, such as a contractual duty or a duty of confidence.
    1.4   Be threatening, abuse or invade another's privacy, or cause annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety.
    1.5   Be used to impersonate any person, to misrepresent your identity or affiliation with any person, or be likely to deceive any person.
    1.6   Give the impression that they represent Zawya.
    1.7   Advocate, promote or assist any unlawful act such as (by way of example only) copyright infringement or computer misuse.
  2. The content posted on www.zawya.com is created by members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of Zawya. Zawya reserves the right to review all comments prior to posting and edit or delete any contribution, but Zawya is not responsible for and can not be held liable for any content posted by members of the public on www.zawya.com.
  3. Zawya is not responsible for the availability or content of any third party sites that are accessible through www.zawya.com. Any links to third party websites from www.zawya.com do not amount to any endorsement of that site by Zawya and any use of that site by you is at your own risk.
  4. By submitting your comment, you hereby give Zawya the right, but not the obligation, to post, air, edit, exhibit, telecast, webcast, re-use, publish, reproduce, use, license, print, distribute or otherwise use your comments worldwide, in perpetuity.