To: c.hinton who wrote (373 ) 8/11/2005 10:51:29 AM From: c.hinton Respond to of 50075 IEA calls on Opec to pump more oil By Javier Blas in London Published: August 11 2005 11:17 | Last updated: August 11 2005 11:17 The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries will have to pump more oil than previously thought as supply from countries outside the oil cartel is falling short of expectations in spite of record oil prices, the International Energy Agency, the west’s energy watchdog warned on Thursday ADVERTISEMENT Opec, which pumps about 40 per cent of global oil, is already producing near its limit, and any call for more supply will put further strain on the oil cartel. “Opec producers aside from Saudi Arabia have little market influence as their spare capacity has been almost exhausted,” the IEA said in its monthly oil market report. The IEA cut its supply forecast for non-Opec for 2005 by 205,000 barrels a day, to a year growth of 675,000 b/d half the increase of 2004 and the lowest increment for non-Opec supply since 1999. But production is expected to rebound in 2006, rising by 1,25m b/d, although some analyst are sceptical about the chances of such a strong recovery. The lower production estimates come in spite of a 50 per cent rise in oil prices in the last year. Higher prices traditionally have helped oil to expend more money in exploration and production projects and raise output. The watchdog attributed the sharp downward revision to disappointing output figures from Russia, the impact of hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico area and declines in mature oil provinces, like the North Sea and Alaska. Middle East geopolitical concerns and refinery outages pushed oil prices in early trading this morning a nominal to a nominal all-time high of $65.30 a barrel in New York. Oil was trading flat at $65.00 a barrel after the release of the EIA's monthly oil report. In London, the European benchmark Brent, which hit all-time high earlier on Thursday at $64.57, was trading up 10 cents, at 64.09 a barrel. The IEA also increased its estimates for world oil demand for 2005 and 2006 by 20,000 b/d and 30,000 b/d. But changes in the historical data lowered the baseline demand figures to 83.7m b/d for 2005 and 85.51m b/d for 2006. “Higher oil prices have brought about a limited demand-side and substitution response. They have not completely choked off oil demand growth,” the IEA said in its report’s closely watched editorial. Higher oil demand coupled with lower non-Opec supply has increased the need for the cartel oil, the so called 'call on Opec' by 300,000 b/d in the fourth quarter of this year, to 29.2m b/d and 200,000 b/d for 2006. “The market verdict remains that more inventories are needed until investment responses catch up and demand patterns are clearer,” the IEA said.