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The
OPEC member states are discussing the possibility of an emergency meeting
should oil prices continue to fall, said Nigerian Oil Minister, and OPEC
President Diezani Alison-Madueke. Prices have dropped by than half since their
peak last summer.
If
the price “slips any further it is highly likely that I will
have to call an extraordinary meeting of OPEC in the next six weeks or so,”
said Alison-Madueke, as quoted by the Financial Times, adding that discussions
are already underway.
“Almost all OPEC countries,
except perhaps the Arab bloc, are very uncomfortable,”
she said. As the cartel’s president, she is responsible for maintaining
communication with member countries and Secretary-General El-Badri in case of
an emergency meeting.
Alison-Madueke
expects prices will stabilize at least at the current level, because otherwise
it would be difficult or even impossible for some cartel members to implement
their planned budgets.
At
a time of publication Tuesday, Brent crude was trading at US$59.95 dollars per
barrel, with the price for WTI crude at US$49.89 per barrel.
Despite
the president’s willingness to hold an emergency meeting, OPEC’s de facto
leader Saudi Arabia is unlikely to participate, say market analysts.
Alison-Madueke stressed that OPEC cannot stabilize the oil market alone, that’s
why the cartel should consult other key oil producers such as the United
States, Russia, as well as global groups like the International Energy Agency
and G20.
“It cannot only be OPEC that is
responsible for stability in the market,” she said. “The
world has moved on from the days that OPEC was the be all and end all.”
The
last OPEC meeting was held in November 2014. The members of the cartel then
decided to leave oil output unchanged at 30 million barrels per day.
Many
experts consider it an attempt to protect OPEC members’ share of the global
energy market.
Oil prices reached their
six-year low in January, losing more that 50 percent since summer 2014.
However, in February the price of Brent crude stabilized at around US$60 per
barrel.
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