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VIENNA, Sept. 5 (Xinhuanet) -- The price of OPEC
crude oil has dropped after a consecutive rise in 10 trading days due to the
destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina in the oil and gas producing Gulf of
Mexico.
The Vienna-headquartered Secretariat of the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries announced Monday that the prices
of a package of 11 market-monitored crudes slipped 64 US cents on Friday from a
record high of 61.37 dollars a barrel.
The average oil prices dropped as the US
administration decided Friday to tap its strategic oil reserves to ease the
energy crisis, but grave concerns linger as exploitation and refining remain
hobbled in the United States and the Mexican Gulf that was hit by Hurricane
Katrina a week ago.
Katrina could spark a worldwide energy crisis, Claude
Mandil, executive director of the Paris-based International Energy Agency,
warned on Sunday.
But Kuwait's Energy Minister Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahd
al-Sabah, whoholds the rotating OPEC presidency, said the judgment is not well
grounded.
The OPEC's daily output of about 304 million barrels
has exceeded global demand for the cartel's oil, and will secure the stability
of the market, he said.
Earlier last week, OPEC announced in a statement that
its member states that still have spare capacity are increasing their oil
supply. The cartel has also decided to raise the daily production quota in
October by 500,000 barrels. Enditem |