OPEC Reaffirms Pledge to Cut Production Quotas(在线收听) |
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Melanie Sully OPEC decided to go ahead with a four percent cut in oil production quotas, despite rising consumption and record prices of gasoline in the United States. OPEC oil ministers decided to stick to their decision last month to reduce their target output by a million barrels per day. That means that, starting Thursday, the 11 members in the cartel will pump 23.5 million barrels per day on to the markets. Oil analyst Ehsan Ul-Haq, of PVM Oil Associates in Vienna, says OPEC members tempted by high prices are likely to ignore the new quotas. He says non-OPEC oil producers like Russia will also take advantage of high prices and pump more oil onto the market. He said, if prices stay high for several months then demand for oil will fall off, especially in poorer Asian countries, such as India. At the OPEC meeting, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates wanted to delay the production cut to allow prices to settle, but lead producer, Saudi Arabia, pushed for cuts now. Consumer countries, such as the United States, are worried that crude prices, already close to 13-year highs at around $36 per barrel, could top the $40 mark. Mr. Ul-Haq said higher prices will hit U.S. consumers particularly hard. "The price might be too high for consumers in the United States because in Europe, because of the stronger euro consumers are not feeling the price, but in the United States they have already started feeling the prices and after the consumers have paid their taxes there might not be too much money left for gasoline." He said what is keeping oil prices high is political insecurity around the world, and market speculation. OPEC officials said the decision to curb output targets was made to avoid a sudden slump in prices when demand falls off in the spring. They said the decision will be reviewed in June. 注释: |
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