Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey fears send oil to record high

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey fears send oil to record high

    Turkey fears send oil to record high

    By Javier Blas in London and Daniel Dombey in Washington

    Published: October 12 2007 19:19 | Last updated: October 13 2007 00:43

    Crude oil prices on Friday surged to a fresh high of $84 a barrel on
    concerns that Turkey might soon launch an invasion of northern Iraq in
    an attempt to hit Kurdish militants it accuses of attacking Turkish
    targets.

    Such an attack could destabilise the Kurdistan region, the only
    relatively peaceful area in Iraq. But public outrage against the
    separatist Kurdish PKK is running high after recent attacks and
    Turkey's parliament is set to vote next week on a government request
    for authorisation of a military operation.

    Rapidly declining oil inventories in developed countries ahead of the
    northern hemisphere winter also helped push the price higher. Nymex
    December West Texas Intermediate surged 97 cents to $84.05 a barrel,
    above the previous record of $83.90 a barrel, as traders covered their
    positions for the weekend. It closed at $83.71 a barrel, up 63 cents
    on the day.

    Turkey said it was ready for any international criticism if it
    launched an attack against Kurdish rebels who it says use northern
    Iraq as a base to attack Turkish - targets. "We do not need anyone's
    advice on northern Iraq and the operation to be carried out there,"
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, prime minister, said.

    The US has sought to dissuade Turkey from such an operation but
    relations between Washington and Ankara have become more tense after a
    US congressional committee voted last week to denounce as genocide the
    mass killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire.

    Iraq pumped about 2.18m barrels a day of crude oil in September, up
    190,000 b/d from August, according to the latest data from the
    International Energy Agency (IEA), the western countries' energy
    watchdog.

    But most of the production was in the south of the country, rather
    than the north, analysts said. Crude oil traders forecast oil exports
    >From northern Iraq would be about 230,000 b/d in September and early
    October.

    Turkey is a key route for a crude oil pipeline from the Caspian sea
    that is forecast to carry about 500,000 b/d of oil by the end of 2007.

    The price surge came amid warnings from the IEA that supplies would
    get "tighter this winter" as developed countries' inventories fell at
    the end of August to below the five-year average, to 53.5 days of
    forward consumption. Inventories were at 55 days on demand in the
    second quarter.

    "Those stocks are clearly tighter than they have been for some time
    but what is driving market expectations and, therefore, prices is the
    lack of confidence that they will be replenished," the IEA said.

    The watchdog has asked the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting
    Countries (Opec) to boost its supplies to build up inventories. Crude
    oil and products inventories usually increase in the third quarter,
    ahead of the winter, but so far they have fallen by 360,000 barrels a
    day.

    The IEA kept roughly unchanged its forecast for oil demand in spite of
    record high prices and slowing economic growth in the US and other
    developed countries.

    It said demand would average 85.9m b/d this year and 88m b/d in 2008,
    roughly the same as it predicted a month ago.

    Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007

    Source: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/375fb27c-78ed-11dc-aaf2- 0000779fd2ac.html
Working...
X