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To: isopatch who wrote (80100)11/27/2000 11:17:15 AM
From: Jon Cave  Respond to of 95453
 
Irag demands 50cent premium

(REUTERS) UPDATE 2-Oil holds ground, Iraq exports under threat
UPDATE 2-Oil holds ground, Iraq exports under threat

(adds U.N. rejection of Iraq prices paras 5,6, quote para 11)
LONDON, Nov 27 (Reuters) - Lofty oil prices held ground on
Monday as dealers fretted over the possible suspension later
this week of crude exports from Iraq.
London Brent oil futures traded up 16 cents a barrel at
$33.28 and U.S. light crude gained two cents to $35.40.
Traders are worried that Baghdad's latest challenge to the
United Nations over the U.N.'s oil-for-food exchange could see a
disruption to Iraqi oil sales.
Iraq has demanded from its customers a 50-cent premium on
oil sales from December 1 to be paid direct to Baghdad, outside
U.N. control.
But the U.N.'s sanctions committee in New York on Monday
rejected Iraq's price formulas for December sales, saying the
prices were too low.
Industry sources said Iraq had proposed low prices so as to
allow for the direct payment of a 50-cent surcharge. It remains
to be seen whether Iraq now submits higher prices to allow
exports to keep flowing beyond the end of November.
Baghdad sells about 2.3 million barrels daily under the
humanitarian exchange, a significant volume on tightly-supplied
world oil markets.
"Iraq is taking a tough line on this and shows no sign of
backing down," said one Iraqi customer.
"We're simply not allowed to pay the 50 cents so we're
assuming that there will be some sort of disruption from Friday.
It all depends how long it goes on for."
Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said on Saturday that Riyadh
would cover for any political disruptions to oil supplies.
"Any shortage in supplies as a result of natural disasters or
political measures...Saudi Arabia and OPEC countries and the
main producers will cooperate to cover the shortage," he said in
an interview with the Arab al-Hayat paper.
Oil prices also remained sensitive to changes in temperature
in the U.S. Northeast, the West's most important heating oil
market.
Prices rose last week after a front of cold weather took
temperatures in the U.S. Northeast to as much as 18 degrees
fahrenheit (10 centigrade) below normal.
U.S. forecaster Weather Services Corp predicts above average
temperatures in the region until Wednesday before another cold
spell starts at the end of the week.
"With heating oil stocks so low, the States has now devolved
into a weather market," said Peter Gignoux of Schroder Salomon
Smith Barney.
Energy markets are highly sensitive to weather forecasts
because dwindling fuel stockpiles this year in the United States
have stoked fears of supply shortages especially if a prolonged
winter freeze should set in.
Industry data last week showed the beginnings of a recovery
in U.S. crude and gasoline stocks, but heating oil inventories
remain precariously thin in some areas.