Iraq will forgo OPEC summit-- U.S. oil adviser says nation's oil problems too pressing
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June 3, 2003, 7:42AM
Houston Chronicle Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON -- Iraq will skip next week's OPEC meeting and concentrate on reducing gasoline lines and getting oil exports flowing again, the U.S. adviser to the country's oil industry said Monday.
Philip Carroll, the former head of Houston's Shell Oil Co., said in an interview from Baghdad that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries conference coming up in Doha, Qatar, is viewed as "a nonissue at the moment."
With Iraq still importing petroleum products to meet domestic needs, the country's newly reconstituted oil ministry doesn't plan to send even an observer to the June 11 meeting.
"It will be, of course, something the ministry will have to think about for the next meeting later this year," Carroll said, adding that decisions about Iraq's participation in OPEC are being made by Iraqis, not U.S. authorities.
Many analysts believe Iraq doesn't need to become embroiled in the debate over OPEC production levels.
"Iraq has much more immediate concerns than worrying about OPEC," said Raad Alkadiri with Washington-based PFC energy.
Iraq could take more interest in September, when OPEC is likely to meet again.
By then, the country could be exporting more than a million barrels a day.
"I would think Iraq would at least be an observer but probably a participant," noted John Lichtblau, chairman of the New York-based Petroleum Industry Research Foundation.
Deputy oil ministers from the OPEC countries are slated to gather in Vienna, Austria, this week in preparation for the Doha session.
The cartel had long been expected to use the coming meeting to cut back production ceilings.
But with oil prices topping $30 a barrel, crude stocks remaining low and member states including Venezuela and Nigeria still struggling to meet their existing quotas, OPEC is under far less pressure to take such difficult action now.
Carroll and other U.S. officials are trying to steer clear of the debate over whether the new Iraq should remain in OPEC.
They say a new government should make that call. In fact, that's a decision a new administration could put off for years.
Iraq has not been subject to OPEC's production limits since the United Nations imposed sanctions on Saddam Hussein's government after the 1990 invasion of Kuwait.
Prior to the Persian Gulf War, Iraq was producing about 3 million barrels a day.
If new leadership in Baghdad opts to stay within the OPEC fold, that government could argue it should not be bound by any production limits until it again reaches 3 million barrels a day.
Iraq's oil fields currently are producing between 600,000 and 800,000 barrels a day, Carroll said.
That's only a fraction of the 2.5 million barrels a day Iraq was pumping before the war, but it's enough to meet the country's domestic demand of about 400,000 barrels a day.
Iraq, which boasts the third-largest oil reserves in the world, is unable to export any of those extra barrels right now because the country's storage capacity is full.
As a result, about 300,000 barrels a day of Iraq's current production is being reinjected into the ground.
Iraq is expected to resume crude exports within the next two weeks, ending a three-month interruption and providing a strong psychological boost to a nation that has suffered through war, deprivation and lawlessness.
An oil tanker will begin loading crude from Iraq's northern Kirkuk field at the Turkish port city of Ceyhan by late next week, Carroll said.
That means 1 million barrels of Iraqi crude could be steaming toward world markets by June 15.
Iraq won't need to boost domestic production immediately in order to crank up crude exports.
The nation has 8 million barrels of crude sitting in storage in Ceyhan, Lichtblau said.
But while the export business is ramping up, fuel shortages within the country remain a worry.
That's because while production may be high enough to meet domestic consumption, distribution bottlenecks remain.
Liquefied petroleum gas, for example, which the Iraqis use for cooking, is still in short supply.
And "the gasoline lines are considerably down, but they're still too long for my purposes," with the lines in Baghdad a particular problem, Carroll said.
To help ease the shortages, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, together with prime contractor Houston-based Halliburton Co. and the Iraqi oil ministry, is scrambling to repair natural gas processing facilities in the south and to double production from a refinery near Basra, Iraq's second-largest city.
The Iraqis have complained bitterly about how slowly the occupying forces have gotten the country's oil sector up and running again.
U.S. officials point to the widespread looting that has damaged much of the country's infrastructure.
But organizational delays have taken their toll as well. The Bush administration's plan calls for, initially, seven and eventually nine members to be appointed to Carroll's advisory panel, with Iraqi citizens comprising a majority.
Only three members have been appointed to date: Carroll, Thamer al-Ghadhban, a former planning director for the oil ministry who is now serving as its interim chief executive officer, and Fadhil Othman, a longtime executive with Iraq's State Oil Marketing Organization, known as Somo.
Carroll said he hopes to have the panel members in place by the end of the month.
Iraqis, however, remember how Saddam's regime restored basic services fairly quickly after the Persian Gulf War
"No matter how fair the comparison is, the U.S. is coming up short in the minds of the Iraqis," Alkadiri said. And as Baghdad prepared for what is likely to be a long, hot summer, explanations about institutional reforms or advisory panel organizations "aren't going to cut the mustard."
Nigeria: Gov't Directs Oil Firms to Raise Output
Posted by click at 3:24 AM
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AllAfrica.com, June 2, 2003
Posted to the web June 2, 2003
Mike Oduniyi
Lagos
The Federal Government may have directed oil producing companies to raise output substantially up to Nigeria's capacity this month, in a bid to make up for the production losses to violence in the Niger Delta and the attendant revenue loss.
Nigeria's oil production had been reduced to around 1.9 million barrels per day (bpd) compared to its officially assigned quota of 2.018 million by the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), since March this year when communal violence broke out in Warri, Delta State.
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While oil industry sources disclosed that they had been told to raise production to full capacity, the Department of Petroleum Resources (the nation's oil industry monitors) said at the weekend that companies with spare capacity had only been directed to make up for the losses from the violence-prone areas.
According to a senior DPR official, Nigeria has struggled to remain within her OPEC limit even though she was still running below the quota.
"We had a lot of crisis in May. As at Friday, we were still running slightly below our quota," said the official, adding, "what we do is to give additional quota to companies with spare capacity if a company can't meet up with quota."
OPEC meets on June 11, this year to review its new ceiling of 25.4 million bpd. Officials however, said that effectively, there was still no serious attachment to OPEC quota following the Middle East crisis while the effect of the Venezuela crisis was yet to wane on the market.
Nigeria has an installed production capacity of about 2.6 million bpd. Its new OPEC quota effective June 1, this year was 2.092 million. However, in the aftermath of the Warri crisis, industry officials said that about 300,000 bpd of crude production was still shut in by Shell, ChevronTexaco and Total, almost over two months ago.
In monetary terms, this translates into a daily loss of $6.6 million revenue, given the $22 per barrel official selling price for Nigeria's crude oil.
Furthermore, income from condensate production, (which does not fall under OPEC quota application) has been halted following the fire at ExxonMobil Oso Condensate production platform offshore Akwa Ibom, early last month.
Oil exports account for more than 90 percent of Nigeria's foreign exchange earnings. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), said in its 2002 Annual Reports and Account that following a cut in Nigeria's OPEC quota last year, the country's total exports declined to 545.1 million barrels compared to 674.9 million barrels in 2001.
Consequently, revenue stood at N496.3 billion, declining by N438 billion when compared to 2001 earnings.
Meanwhile, the United States of America (USA) remained the largest importer of Nigeria's crude oil. The CBN report said the country's import accounted for 40.3 per cent of Nigeria's total oil exports last year.
Nigeria, according to the apex bank, exported 1.66 million barrels of oil daily last year, where the value of crude exported to Asia countries, which had been on the increase since 1999, dropped to N313.1 billion from N366.0 billion in 2001.
Export of crude to the Americas decreased to 278.5 million barrels valued at N842.2 billion, from 334.9 million barrels valued at N912.7 billion in 2001.
"Similarly, the volume and value of oil exports to western Europe also fell during the review year, totalling 121.0 million barrels valued at N369.2 billion compared with 154.4 million barrels worth N420.7 billion in 2001," said the CBN.
Nigeria: FG Directs Oil Firms to Raise Output
Posted by click at 12:16 AM
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This Day News, Nigeria
By Mike Oduniyi
The Federal Government may have directed oil producing companies to raise output substantially up to Nigeria's capacity this month, in a bid to make up for the production losses to violence in the Niger Delta and the attendant revenue loss.
Nigeria's oil production had been reduced to around 1.9 million barrels per day (bpd) compared to its officially assigned quota of 2.018 million by the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), since March this year when communal violence broke out in Warri, Delta State.
While oil industry sources disclosed that they had been told to raise production to full capacity, the Department of Petroleum Resources (the nation's oil industry monitors) said at the weekend that companies with spare capacity had only been directed to make up for the losses from the violence-prone areas.
According to a senior DPR official, Nigeria has struggled to remain within her OPEC limit even though she was still running below the quota.
"We had a lot of crisis in May. As at Friday, we were still running slightly below our quota," said the official, adding, "what we do is to give additional quota to companies with spare capacity if a company can't meet up with quota."
OPEC meets on June 11, this year to review its new ceiling of 25.4 million bpd. Officials however, said that effectively, there was still no serious attachment to OPEC quota following the Middle East crisis while the effect of the Venezuela crisis was yet to wane on the market.
Nigeria has an installed production capacity of about 2.6 million bpd. Its new OPEC quota effective June 1, this year was 2.092 million. However, in the aftermath of the Warri crisis, industry officials said that about 300,000 bpd of crude production was still shut in by Shell, ChevronTexaco and Total, almost over two months ago.
In monetary terms, this translates into a daily loss of $6.6 million revenue, given the $22 per barrel official selling price for Nigeria's crude oil.
Furthermore, income from condensate production, (which does not fall under OPEC quota application) has been halted following the fire at ExxonMobil Oso Condensate production platform offshore Akwa Ibom, early last month.
Oil exports account for more than 90 percent of Nigeria's foreign exchange earnings. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), said in its 2002 Annual Reports and Account that following a cut in Nigeria's OPEC quota last year, the country's total exports declined to 545.1 million barrels compared to 674.9 million barrels in 2001.
Consequently, revenue stood at N496.3 billion, declining by N438 billion when compared to 2001 earnings.
Meanwhile, the United States of America (USA) remained the largest importer of Nigeria's crude oil. The CBN report said the country's import accounted for 40.3 per cent of Nigeria's total oil exports last year.
Nigeria, according to the apex bank, exported 1.66 million barrels of oil daily last year, where the value of crude exported to Asia countries, which had been on the increase since 1999, dropped to N313.1 billion from N366.0 billion in 2001.
Export of crude to the Americas decreased to 278.5 million barrels valued at N842.2 billion, from 334.9 million barrels valued at N912.7 billion in 2001.
"Similarly, the volume and value of oil exports to western Europe also fell during the review year, totalling 121.0 million barrels valued at N369.2 billion compared with 154.4 million barrels worth N420.7 billion in 2001," said the CBN.
Venezuela Says it Will Adhere to OPEC Cut
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Caracas [<a href=www.riyadhdaily.com.sa>Riyadh Daily-AP]...................................
Venezuela will reduce its oil production if the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries decides to cut output by 1 million barrels a day as expected at its next meeting, the energy minister said Saturday. ‘Venezuela, together with other OPEC countries, will cut (oil production) if necessary,’ Rafael Ramirez told state news agency Venpres. +In this case we would be talking of an extra cut of 1 million barrels, of which 100,000 barrels corresponds to Venezuela.’
OPEC is planning a ministerial meeting in Doha, Qatar, on June 11 to reevaluate production quotas for each of its 10 member countries. The organization agreed in April to reduce oil output by 2 million barrels a day, setting a ceiling of 25.4 million barrels a day effective June 1. The target was up 900,000 barrels a day from the previous one, but to meet it OPEC had to cut actual production by 2 million barrels a day. Venezuela’s current OPEC quota is 2.81 million barrels a day but rises to 2.92 million barrels a day June 1.
Mexico looking to OPEC before next move
Posted by click at 8:49 AM
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Friday, May 30, 2003 · Last updated 7:33 p.m. PT
<a href=seattlepi.nwsource.com>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
MEXICO CITY -- Mexico will keep evaluating oil market conditions before making any decision to change its crude oil export levels, the country's energy department said Friday.
Mexico raised its exports to 1.88 million barrels per day beginning in February as concerns about Iraqi crude supplies and a strike in Venezuela caused world prices to soar.
When the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed last month that it would cut output in June, Mexico deferred a decision, saying it would wait to see market conditions at the time. Mexico isn't a member of OPEC, but has cooperated with the group on supply levels in recent years.
"The expectation of low growth in the main world economies, as well as the renewal of oil activity in Iraq, are elements that will impact, without any doubt, international oil market fundamentals," the energy department said.
The department said Mexico will monitor closely the results of the June 11 meeting of OPEC ministers, to which Mexico has been invited as an observer.
State oil monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, produces around 3.3 million barrels a day of crude oil. Of total exports, about four-fifths of that go to the United States.