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Published 20 Dec, 2005 12:00am

Opec needs output cut next year, says CGES

LONDON, Dec 19: Opec needs to slash production by some 1.3 million barrels per day early next year to stop an oil price slide, the Centre for Global Energy Studies warned in its monthly report published on Monday.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries “is expected to come under pressure to cut oil production in order to support prices once the (northern hemisphere) winter ends”, the research group said in its influential report.

“Unless global oil demand growth bounces back strongly... or non-Opec members suffer another disastrous year in 2006, the CGES expects Opec will need to reduce output by around 1.3 million barrels per day (mbpd) to keep the price of their reference basket of crudes above $45 per barrel.”

“If it cannot find the unity to do so, prices could fall sharply,” it warned.

The Opec reference basket comprises 11 types of main crude exports from each of its members and is usually $5 to $8 below New York’s light sweet crude. The basket price stood at $53.25 per barrel on Friday.

Opec’s production quota stands at 28.0 mbpd and it decided last week in Kuwait not to renew its offer for emergency extra output of 2.0 mbpd.

As a result, actual production will remain at some 30 mbpd, when Iraq’s contribution is included. The country has been excluded from the group’s quota system since 1990, when Iraq invaded neighbouring Kuwait.

The powerful 11-nation cartel also said it would meet again on January 31 in Vienna, and again on March 8, 2006 — two meetings which “will be keenly watched”, the CGES said.

The research group also forecast that global oil demand growth will fall to 1.4pc this year from 3.8 per cent in 2004, before steadying at 1.5 per cent in 2006.

However, the CGES said that “the greatest uncertainty for 2006 is the strength of oil demand growth”, particularly from China and the US.

Chinese officials expect consumption to rise by more than six per cent, nearly twice the rate in 2005.

But the CGES cautioned that “further easing of (China’s) electricity supply problems, and transportation fuel prices that remain below international levels, could weaken this forecast”.

Turning to the United States, the report noted that “robust economic growth and post-hurricane reconstruction should underpin oil demand growth next year”.—AFP

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