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Saudi Arabia, Iran dispute tumbles OPEC oil price  

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How sentiments, speculation, rumours affect global oil market - OPEC scribe, Barkindo

Member-countries of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) suffered 4 percent loss in price of crude oil at the weekend following heightened disagreement between two major producing countries and arch rivals: Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Foreign news cable said the two Middle East oil-rich countries’ refusal to accept each other’s level of oil production cut output led to Brent crude (where Nigeria oil is classified) settling down to $1.76, or 4 .2 percent, at $45.89 a barrel for the week ended Friday 23 September.

Also, the U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude fell to $1.84, or 4 percent, to settle at $44.48.

The development has adversely dished the hope of most countries, including Nigeria, that the outcome of a pre-meeting before September 26-28 in Algeria would see the two Arab countries have a consensus on production cut.

Read also :Again OPEC ignores Nigeria on oil-price regain plans

Data from the United States indicated Saudi Arabia and Iran have about 48 percent of total OPEC output, adding that there have been quite a number of new oil rigs in the US since the quarter of 2014, leading to the price crash that began two years ago.

But an observer said a sign of price stability early last week, when Saudi Arabia offered to reduce production, with the proviso that Iran should also cap its own output before 2016 ends, was shattered.

In order not to be taken unawares, some member-countries, including Venezuela and Iraq have indicated interest to wade into the crisis before the general meeting, said the observer.

“If the Algeria, OPEC’s second attempt for an agreement on production curbs, after a failed effort in May, the market will suffer irreparably in the next few months to come, which no member-country will be better off,” according to OPEC President Dr. Mohammed Bin Saleh Al-Sada.

Concern may also have to shift to non-OPEC member, Russia, as the world’s largest oil exporter whose outputs hit a record time high in the last two months,

According to a Venezuelan official at the weekend, the misunderstanding should not be coming from OPEC at this time, given the readiness of U.S. and other countries to supply the world’s needs of the commodity.

 

 

 

 

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