AP/ June 8, 2011, 11:31 AM

OPEC surprisingly fails to boost oil production

Secretary General of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), Abdullah Al-Badri, right, and Oil Minister of Iran and OPEC President Mohammad Aliabadi, left, talk during a press conference after the OPEC meeting in Vienna, Austria, June 8, 2011.

Secretary General of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), Abdullah Al-Badri, right, and Oil Minister of Iran and OPEC President Mohammad Aliabadi, left, talk during a press conference after the OPEC meeting in Vienna, Austria, June 8, 2011. / AP

Updated at 3:24 p.m. ET

VIENNA - OPEC unexpectedly left its production levels unchanged on Wednesday, causing oil prices to jump, as senior officials said their meeting ended in disarray — a stunning admission for an organization that places a premium on consensus decision making.

OPEC officials said that because of a policy deadlock, the group will maintain present output ceilings with the option of meeting within the next three months to consider a hike.

"We are unable to reach consensus to ... raise our production," OPEC Secretary General Abdullah Al-Badri told reporters, in comments reflecting unusual tensions in the 12-nation Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

Saudi oil minister Ali Naimi called it "one of the worst meetings, we've ever had," while analysts covering OPEC for more than 20 years said they could not remember any other time that the normally closed group had admitted to such divisions in its ranks.

OPEC likely to lift oil production, lower prices

Some even saw the abortive meeting as a harbinger of demise for the organization, which produces more than a third of the world's petroleum.

"OPEC is ... on the point of break-up," said Marc Ostwald of Monument Securities. "A broader perspective is that the post World War II world order is fracturing in a spectacular fashion, be it the EU/Eurozone, the World Bank/IMF, (or) OPEC."

Other experts were less outspoken but agreed Wednesday's outcome would weaken the image of OPEC as a major regulator of oil markets.

"I think there were some tensions," said Jason Schenker, president of Prestige Economics. "But everyone has to do business and countries have different views on what the future of demand looks like."

The news caught markets by surprise, sending oil prices sharply higher. Benchmark crude for July delivery was up $1.25 to $100.34 per barrel in morning trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange after trading lower ahead of the OPEC meeting.

Saudi Arabia and other influential Gulf nations had pushed to increase production ceilings to calm markets and ease concerns that crude was overpriced for consumer nations struggling with their economies. Those opposed were led by Iran, the second-strongest producer within the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

While the Saudis and the Iranians are frequently at loggerheads over pricing, past meetings normally fell in behind Saudi Arabia, which produces the lion's share of OPEC output. But this time, the Saudi-Iranian rivalry combined with major political and economic uncertainties to lead to deadlock.

Among the biggest worries is that unrest in Libya and Yemen could destabilize larger oil-producing nations in the region. The two countries normally produce less than 4 percent of the world's oil needs, and Saudi Arabia and others have boosted output to make up for much of the shortfall.

But while the Saudis have served notice that they are ready to further increase supplies to help compensate for the loss of the daily 1.6 million barrels normally brought to the market by Libya, other OPEC nations — already pumping close to capacity — cannot contribute much. This appeared to have fueled the strong opposition to an output ceiling hike.

Global economic weakness is also worrying producers and consumers.

Poor housing and employment reports from the United States added to the gloom spread by Europe's attempts to bail out governments and Japan's post-Fukushima slump. At its present price of around $100 a barrel, benchmark crude may be too expensive for nations struggling to make ends meet, worsening the economic picture and leading to less oil demand.

But with sputtering economies using less energy, raising output to lower prices also risks flooding the market, leading to a surplus that could drive prices below $80 a barrel. That benchmark, which is preferred by the Saudis and other moderate OPEC members, is considered too low by price hawks Iran and Venezuela.

Tuesday's sober assessment of the U.S. economy from Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke added to concerns, especially as the central banker failed to indicate that more monetary stimulus was likely.

"Despite all their efforts, the Saudis were not able to convince Iran and other countries to increase production," said Ehsan Ul-Haq, an analyst with KBC Energy Economics. "It means there is a huge disagreement — but it also means that it gives the Saudis free space to do what they like."

Going into the meeting, some OPEC nations had signaled that the ministers could opt to raise the output ceiling to actual production levels of around 26 million barrels a day. Add to that the daily 2.7 million barrels produced by Iraq, which is not bound by quotas, and OPEC would have been bringing more than 29 million barrels a day to the market.

The 11 OPEC members are already exceeding their current production quotas. Their output is an estimated 26.15 million barrels daily — about 1.3 million barrels above the daily overall OPEC production target of 24.85 million barrels a day agreed two years ago.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
48 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
samael2014 says:
Other experts were less outspoken but agreed Wednesday's outcome would weaken the image of OPEC as a major regulator of oil markets.

Well you're ministry of information propaganda experts must be referring to profit-sharing, price-fixing and market manipulation with regard to being a MAJOR REGULATOR?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
6591Hou says:
Venezuela and Iran led the opposition to increasing production in order to stabilize the market.....wow, big surprise eh?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
justme2012 says:
Has either Brazil or Mexico increased cheap shipments of oil to us in return for our financing their drilling?

Anyone know what if anything we've gotten for our money?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
justme2012 says:
Maybe we should be trying to find our own oil???

Nah, that would make too much sense.
reply
daffy64 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
You used it up.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
proeliumfessus says:
Excellent! raise the prices- give us excruciating pain, so we'll finally get off gas for good. Two words... Chevy Volt. If you haven't already, look into it.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
noloyalisti says:
Good, the more fuel we burn the more we push ourselves toward extinction from man made global climate change. And the cheaper the fuel is, the more we waste.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
bobbyboobee says:
OPEC decides not to increase production. OPEC makes s**tloads more money. Everyone's stunned and amazed while they try to figure out why OPEC decided not to increase production. OK everyone, once more, from the beginning:: OPEC decides not to.......
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
justme2012 says:
Government Motors wants to add a $1.00 a gallon gas tax in order to force people to buy it's cars.

This is in line with Obama's plans to skyrocket energy costs and his advise to the parent who said he couldn't afford to fill up his gas tank to take his kids to school, where Obama told the guy "go buy a new fuel efficient car".

That's like telling the starving kids who have no bread to "eat cake".
reply
bobbyboobee replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
better watch it now....obama's comin' to eat your kids....better hide 'em
samael2014 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Obama's going to have to talk to Bush's people, if he wants to skyrocket energy prices. Seeing the price of a barrel of oil go from $25/barrel to $125/barrel during the G.W. Bush LIVING NIGHTMARE, is going to be REAL HARD to beat.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
vielmann says:
Keep in mind that in Europe the price for gas is ?10 euros per liter. Imagine having to pay $58 dollars for just a gallon of gas. This is a world problem and OPEC needs to be dealt with heavily, and that include the oil companies based in the US.
reply
vielmann replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Louiville, I guess you believe in corporate management of the world. All else is socialism as far as your're concerned. Sorry if I don't enjoy sucking up to your corporate gods.
gruven13777 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Bad analogy. The state I live in here in the US is bigger than most countries in Europe, plus we have no public transportation and we're not Socialists. Comparing gas prices in Europe to gas prices in America is like trying to compare a vacuum cleaner to a palm tree.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
gruven13777 says:
by Empire_____George------- June 8, 2011 3:49 PM EDT

I am so sick and tired of you doom and gloom folks

----------

MY doom and gloom?

I'm the one who is causing the US to default on it's debt?

I'm the one who is making our housing market go off the edge of a cliff?

I'm the one who caused 15% unemployment?

I'm the one who kept interest rates at 0% for the last 2 decades and put the printing presses into overdrive?

Wow, I never knew I was that powerful.
reply
See all 48 Comments