Related: Crude oil prices rise above 56
dollars
NEW YORK, Jan. 30 (Xinhua) -- Crude oil prices jumped
more than 5 percent on Tuesday at the New York Mercantile Exchange, the biggest
rise in 16 months, as OPEC is to cut supply and cold weather in the U.S.
Northeast boosts fuel consumption.
Crude oil for March delivery rose 2.96 U.S. dollars,
or 5.48 percent, to 56.97 dollars a barrel at New York market, the biggest rise
in one day since Sept. 2005.
Brent crude oil for March increased 2.71 dollars to
56.39 dollars a barrel in London.
OPEC CUT
OPEC producers were set to reduce supply to world
markets by 500,000 barrels per day from Feb. 1, following a 1.2
million-barrel-cut from Nov. 1 last year.
After giving a conflicting signal on Monday, Saudi
Arabia, the world's largest oil producer and leader of OPEC, said it was to
tighten its spigots this week.
A senior Saudi oil official said the kingdom had
advised its customers of the impending 158,000 barrel-a-day cut, which takes
effect Feb. 1, according to the Wall Street Journal.
"After these cuts, our oil production will have
declined by about one million barrels a day since last summer," the senior Saudi
oil official was quoted as saying by the Journal.
The report said that Saudi Arabia's
one-million-barrel reduction is nearly double the total cuts it agreed to make
under two output reductions hammered out by OPEC at meetings in Doha, Qatar, in
October and in Abuja, Nigeria, in December.
OPEC's December crude oil production was 28.62
million barrels a day, a decline of 1.3 million barrels, or 4.3 percent, since
July, according to a Bloomberg News Survey.
HEATING
DEMAND
According to the National Weather Service, the cold
weather will continue to dominate the U.S. Northeast for the next two weeks.
As the biggest consumer of fuel, the U.S. Northeast
is using some 80 percent of the nation's heating oil.
Crude prices rebounded above 55 dollars a barrel last
week as cold weather hit the Northeast and the latest weather forecast boosted
the energy prices.
The price of natural gas for March delivery rose 75.5
cents, or 11 percent, to 7.692 dollars per million British thermal units.
Heating oil for February delivery rose 8.86 cents, or
5.7 percent to 1.6375 dollars a gallon in New York.
Tuesday's surge was also fueled by a rush of buying
by funds ahead of a fresh OPEC output cut, said analysts.