Supplies and prices - May 14
by Staff
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... In later news reports, Iranian officials denied that production cuts were imminent, but said a reduction has been discussed. Cordier doubts Iran will actually cut oil production. The nation's economy is in bad shape, Cordier said: "They need all the petrodollars they can get."
“Such a proposal has been put forward and is currently under expert review,” Ahmadinejad said in a Tuesday press conference in Tehran when asked about the possibility of reducing oil production. Iran's Oil Minister Gholam-Hossein Nozari had earlier denied media reports that the oil-rich country was planning to cut its crude output by 400,000 to one million barrels per day starting next month. Refiners in Asia, customer for around 60 percent of Iranian crude, said they have not been informed of any output cuts. Meanwhile, US oil futures hit a record $126.98 a barrel on Tuesday following the Iranian president's remarks. Related from Reuters-Africa: Iran reviews proposal to cut oil output
The House is expected to follow suit later today. The action, supported by the Democratic and Republican presidential candidates, comes as high fuel costs have contributed to the nation's economic woes and become a hot issue on the campaign trail. It could be the only legislation that Congress passes this year in response to public angst at the fuel pump because of the parties' differences over energy issues. The Senate measure passed 97 to 1, with Sens. Barack Obama of Illinois and Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York breaking off from their campaigns to return to the Capitol to vote for the measure. Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the presumptive GOP presidential nominee, supported the measure but was absent for the vote, continuing his campaigning in the Pacific Northwest. "Why on earth should we be putting oil underground at a time of record high prices?" Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.), the measure's chief sponsor, argued. From Rep. Roscoe Bartlett's office: Congressman Bartlett said,
The SPR is a 700 million-barrel emergency store of oil maintained by the national government for a very rainy day: a war or a sudden interruption of the oil supply from one or more of the unstable countries-Venezuela, Nigeria, and the Persian Gulf states-from which the U.S. buys fuel. Established in the aftermath of the 1973-1974 oil embargo, the SPR gives the President a powerful response option should a disruption in commercial oil supplies threaten the U.S. economy. ... The Strategic Petroleum Reserve is, first and foremost, a tool of national security policy. It was never intended that the SPR would be used to tamper with the market or to play politics, that its oil would be released in order to bring prices down, or that we would stop filling the SPR to accommodate either the market or short-term electoral interests in the campaign season.
The Senators introduced a resolution of disapproval on the arms sale, as President George W. Bush prepared to head for Saudi Arabia, partly on a mission to contain runaway oil prices. "We are saying to the Saudis that, if you don't help us, why should we be helping you?" said New York Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer. |
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