By Sabina Castelfranco, VOA, Rome
Government energy ministers from oil-rich nations and international oil company
executives are attending a three-day International Energy Forum in Rome. Sabina
Castelfranco reports from Rome the meeting, which ends Tuesday, is being held as
crude oil prices reached a record high.
Participants at the oil summit in Rome do not seem to find agreement on what is
causing the rise in oil prices. International Energy Agency head Nobuo Tanaka
warned that current prices, which hit a record of $117 a barrel, are too high
for all consumers and particularly punishing for developing nations.
Speaking at the biennial International Energy Conference, Tanaka said the
problem is not underground, but above ground. He added that better
infrastructure and more stable policies in producing countries are important to
increase capacity and stressed the need for investment.
But
OPEC and its member nations maintain that raising capacity is unlikely to have
any impact. The Iranian Oil Minister Gholam-Hussein Nozari said more than enough
oil is being supplied. He added that other issues are affecting oil prices like
the dollar.
OPEC Secretary-General Abdalla Salem al-Badri has said the group is prepared to
raise production if the price pressure is due to a shortage of supply - but also
said he doubted the connection.
"There is a common understanding now that [oil prices] has nothing to do with
supply and demand," he said.
The OPEC chief said more oil would not solve the high prices. Al-Badri added
that OPEC's production levels are just one of many factors, while others
included the political situation, market speculation, labor issues and natural
catastrophes.
Italy's former prime minister Romano Prodi also spoke of his concern. He says
what is taking place is a conflict between food and fuel, with disastrous social
consequences. He adds that governments cannot just watch this happen.
In another industry development, Iraq Oil Minister Hussein al-Shahristani said
contracts between the autonomous Northern Iraqi Kurds and foreign companies
remain invalid, despite recent talks between the two sides to discuss the
country's long-delayed federal oil law.
The Kurds have signed about 25 production-sharing contracts with several small
and mid-sized oil companies, but Al-Shahristani said they do not meet the
conditions of the draft 2007 law.
The draft law requires an open bidding process and would establish which foreign
countries are eligible to work in Iraq. The dispute between the the central
government in Baghdad and the Kurds has dragged on for many months, delaying
agreement on a final oil law that Iraq badly requires to attract foreign
investment and increase oil production.
... Payvand News - 04/22/08 ...
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