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Oil price rise worries EU
By Batuk Gathani
BRUSSELS, AUG. 25. There is growing concern in European Union
countries about the rise in oil prices by about 50 per cent over
last year to the current price of $ 32 a barrel.
This week the European Union's Energy Commissioner (Minister),
Ms. Palacio de Loyala, asked the OPEC President - Venezuela's Oil
Minister, Mr. Rodriguez - to boost production to ``cool red hot
oil markets'' and bring the price down to $ 25 per barrel. Early
this year, at the end of the OPEC meeting in Vienna, the Saudi
Oil Minister, Mr. Ali Naimi, said he would like the crude prices
to stay between $ 20 and $ 25 per barrel. Saudi Arabia is the
world's largest oil exporter and with the largest reserves.
The United States President, Mr. Bill Clinton's weekend visit to
Nigeria has special significance and his latest decision to voice
Western concern about rising oil prices is seen as an attempt to
indirectly influence the OPEC to curb prices.
Observers note that oil inventories in major Western economies
are currently at lowest levels amid concern that high prices
could affect economic growth prospects in Western and Asian
countries. Mr. Clinton said this week he believed the OPEC
nations should increase production with the goal of reducing
prices to ``the low of mid-20s''. The U.S. administration also
proposes to pursue this strategy with other key OPEC members. The
current prices of $ 32 has evoked the nightmarish scenario of the
1970s when the oil prices were quadrupled by the OPEC members.
The prices were then boosted to $ 40 per barrel and industrial
countries faced a soaring inflation and a rise in unemployment,
from which the European countries particularly have yet to
recover.
In the last 18 months, crude prices have tripled from their
record lows. European analysts are worried that current price of
$ 30 plus may become a permanent fixture and could have a
depressing effect on European and Asian economic growth
prospects.
Impact on India
Apart from the effect high crude prices may have on developed
economies, the current scenario has ominous overtones for India.
Oil is currently trading at $ 32 a barrel from lows of $ 20 a
barrel and hence prospects of a slight increase or decrease,
could have significant impact on India's import costs.
India's current option is more oil imports, since its level of
self-sufficiency has declined from some 70 per cent a decade ago
to little more than 40 per cent now. This is attributed to static
domestic production and growing demand.
According to current projections, domestic Indian crude
production will only meet 32 per cent of its requirements by
2001. This would suggest that about 70 per cent of country's oil
needs will have to be met by imports. India will be seen
importing 74 million tonnes of oil if the consumption rises to
estimated 112 million tonnes in the near future.
The Indian imports of crude oil will continue to grow with
increasing demand as the domestic production - minus a miracle -
is unable to keep pace with the country's growing consumption of
oil. In monetary terms all this can make a significant dent in
India's foreign exchange resources as a world bank study revealed
that 80 per cent of India's foreign exchange earnings will be
used to finance imports of crude and petroleum products, by the
end of the current decade.
It is in this background, even a slight variation in the price on
the global market could have far reaching repercussions on
India's balance of payment situation. The ideal strategy for
India, is to boost domestic oil production but this calls for
enormous investments to tap new supplies either in deep sea or on
land. India's natural oil resources are limited. On present
reckoning, the oil production from Indian indigenous fields could
level off at 50 million tonnes mark, but this is also far lower
than the estimated consumption in next 10 years.
The oil price movement is a dominant theme in the world energy
sector. The 12 OPEC members have tried to underpin their prices
by either restricting or boosting their production. Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait and United Arab Emirates have impressive surplus
capacities and others are producing within their wide margins.
Major non-OPEC production areas are north sea in Europe and
Russia. China, now rated among the world's fast growing
economies, is now a net oil importer for the first time since the
early 1970s. The world's scientists are looking at alternative
energy resources but no major breakthroughs has yet emerged.
In a recent interview, the former Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh
Yamani, a prominent analyst, stated that within a few decades
there will be no market for crude oil with current technological
advances geared to contain environmental challenges and use of
alternative energy sources for automobile engines. This is still
a Utopia but within the realm of probability. The OPEC's
influence has also slightly faded with surge in oil production
from non-OPEC countries but currently the OPEC continues to rule
the waves in oil pricing and production.
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