Emmanuel
Ibe Kachikwu, Minister of State for Petroleum Resources and President of the
OPEC
|
OPEC president Emmanuel
Ibe Kachikwu said on Tuesday that he expects an extraordinary meeting of the
oil cartel in "early March" to address nosediving crude prices.
AFP report continues:
"We
did say that if it (the price) hits the US$35 (per barrel), we will begin to
look (at)... an extraordinary meeting," said Kachikwu, who is Nigerian
minister of state for petroleum resources.
The
prices have hit levels that necessitate a meeting, he told an energy forum in
Abu Dhabi, but added that he not yet confirmed with fellow OPEC ministers if
they would be willing to attend.
The
US crude oil price tumbled below US$31 a barrel Tuesday, extending a sell-off
that has pushed it to more than 12-year lows amid a global supply glut, a
strong dollar and tepid demand.
Saudi-led
Gulf exporters within OPEC have so far refused to cut production to curb
sliding prices, seeking to protect their market share despite a heavy blow to
their revenues.
Kachikwu
said that member states differ on the issue of intervention.
"One
group feels there is a need to intervene. The other group feels even if we did,
we are only 30 to 35 percent of the producers really," as 65 percent of
supply comes from non-OPEC countries, he said at the Gulf Intelligence UAE
Energy Forum.
"Unless
you have this 65 percent (of) producers coming back to the table you really
won't make any dramatic difference," he added.
US
benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for February delivery was down around
2.8 percent, at US$30.54 per barrel, in Asian trade on Tuesday.
European
benchmark Brent North Sea crude fell 3.1 percent, to US$30.57.
The
last time prices were so low for WTI was in December 2003 and in April 2004 for
Brent.
Prices plummeted 10 percent
last week on fears about the global supply glut and weakness in China, the
world's biggest energy user.
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