20.01.2011, 12:28 5135

OPEC's grip on oil market to return to 1970s levels

World oil prices remained close to the $100-per-barrel mark last night as BP said OPEC was set to increase its share of global oil production to levels not seen since the oil shocks of the 1970s.

Almaty. January 20. Kazakhstan Today - World oil prices remained close to the $100-per-barrel mark last night as BP said OPEC was set to increase its share of global oil production to levels not seen since the oil shocks of the 1970s.

In the BP Energy Outlook 2030, the oil giant predicted that the producers' cartel would see its share rise to 46 per cent during the coming two decades - "a position not seen since 1977", just years after an OPEC embargo triggered the oil crisis in 1973.

The projection came as US crude oil prices touched intra-day highs of around $91.8 per barrel, while ICE Brent futures for March rose to $98.6 per barrel at one point.

Prices have been rising steadily in recent weeks amid debate over whether or not OPEC should to increase oil supplies. Earlier this month, Fatih Birol, the chief economist of the International Energy Agency (IEA), which speaks for the big oil consumers in the West, gave warning that prices were entering a danger zone and threatening the still-fragile global economic recovery.

This week, the IEA raised its oil-demand growth forecast for the year to 1.41 million barrels per day, lower than last year's jump in consumption, but higher than OPEC's growth estimate of 1.23 million barrels per day.

The cartel, which decided against raising output at its last meeting in December, believes the world is well supplied, blaming the high prices on "technical matters" such as the recent disruption to the Alaskan route that supplies more than 10 per cent of US crude oil, and outages in the North Sea.

This information may not be reproduced without reference to Kazakhstan Today. Copyright of materials of News Agency Kazakhstan Today.

Found an error in the text?

Select the error and press Ctrl + Enter at the same time.

relevant news

Most viewed