Oil price sinks to four-year low

Oil price sinks to four-year low

The price of oil has sunk to under $34 a barrel for the first time for more than four and a half years, in the face of slumping demand.

 
The oil price fall came on Friday, as Britain's prime minister called for action to reduce huge swings in oil prices that he said had damaged the world economy.
 
"We will need a new partnership between oil-producing and oil-consuming countries," Gordon Brown said, speaking at the opening of an energy conference in the UK.
 
"As with the global financial crisis, this global crisis in our energy markets cannot be solved by one nation or one continent alone."
 
Reduced demand
 
Brown originally called for the meeting, attended by the big consuming nations and energy ministers from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, in June, when oil prices were heading towards an all-time peak of more than $147 a barrel.
 
Since then, prices have dropped more than $100 as the credit crisis and recession have shrunk demand for fuel.
 
On Friday, New York's light sweet crude for delivery in January sank as low as $33.44 a barrel.
 
New York prices have now plunged by about 77 per cent since the record high in July.
 
London's Brent North Sea oil for February delivery edged up four cents to $43.40 a barrel, after dipping as low as 43.21.
 
'Enormous damage'
 
Brown told the UK conference that the sharp spike in oil prices had "an enormous and damaging impact on the global economy".
 
He cited a recent study which estimated "the high oil price took around $150bn out of world economic output this year alone".
 
Brown said: "But today with prices falling it is clear that our most pressing challenge now and for the future is oil price volatility. Such volatility is in no one's interest. Wild fluctuations in oil prices harm nations all round the world."
 
Ali al-Naimi, the Saudi oil minister, agreed that oil price volatility damaged all countries, stressing that the recent sharp falls in oil prices to very low levels played "havoc" with investment plans in oil-producing countries and jeopardized future oil supplies.
 
"Instability and volatility in oil markets hurt everyone," he said
 
Saudi Arabia has said that $75 a barrel is a fair price for oil.
 
Volatile markets
 
On Wednesday Opec agreed to cut output by 2.2 million barrels a day in order to raise prices, but the move has failed to prevent oil from sliding.
 
"The market has to wait for this cut to take place before it can react positively to it," Saadallah Al-Fathi, a Dubai-based oil analyst, told Al Jazeera.
 
"Nobody expected the financial and economic crisis that we are in now. We are about to re-discover the very strong link between economic growth and oil demand."
 
Chakib Khelil, Opec's president, has said that the group would continue cutting output until the price stabilizes.
 
But some analysts have questioned whether all members of Opec, which produces about 40 per cent of the world's crude oil, would fully enforce the reduction.
 
PHOTO CAPTION
 
Gordon Brown, Britain's prime minister speaking at the opening of an energy conference in the UK.
 
Al-Jazeera
 

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