Oil price fall not OPEC's fault - Gulf ministers
Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi Saudi Arabia's Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi
said falling prices were not good for the country, but would help
stimulate global economic growth Oil-rich Gulf states have vowed not to
cut crude production, blaming speculators and producers outside the OPEC
group for tumbling prices.
Saudi Arabia's Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said "the spread of
misleading information and speculation" had contributed to the 40% price
fall.
Speaking in Abu Dhabi, he also dismissed claims of a Saudi plot to
push prices down for political goals.
Ministers from Kuwait and the UAE also said there were no plans to
cut output.
Naimi said that if producer countries outside OPEC wanted to restrict
output, "they are welcome".
"We are not going to cut, certainly Saudi Arabia is not going to
cut." Kuwait's Oil Minister, Ali al-Omair, said OPEC did not need to cut
production and would not consider an emergency meeting.
"I don't think we need to cut. We gave a chance to others [and] they
were not willing to do so," he said during the conference in Abu Dhabi
on Sunday.
In November, OPEC decided to keep its target output of 30 million
barrels per day unchanged, leaving the market to balance itself without
the group taking action. In the past, Saudi Arabia, the world's largest
producer, has acted to rein in output to support prices.
The decision not to intervene this time prompted conspiracy theories,
including that OPEC wanted to undermine the US shale boom and that there
was a political plot to reduce oil revenues earned by Russia and Iran.
Naimi denied that politics played a role in the kingdom's oil policy.
He said he was not happy about the falling oil price, but added:
"Current prices do not encourage investment in any form of energy, but
they stimulate global economic growth, leading ultimately to an increase
in global demand and a slowdown in the growth of supplies."
Meanwhile, OPEC's Secretary-General Abdullah al-Badri told Reuters
news agency on Sunday he hoped to see a recovery in the price of oil by
the end of next year.
"We hope the price would rebound by the end of the second half of
2015," he said.
"We can't see the market now, we have to wait until the end of the
second half of 2015 to see how the market will react to these low
prices."
The world is expected to need less OPECoil next year as the US shale
gas boom accelerates.
- BBC
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