Iraq Says OPEC Should Cut Oil Supply
Huh?
LONDON, Oct 13 (Reuters) - OPEC will consider cutting output if the world does not need its oil, Iraq’s Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani said on Monday, adding the group was already producing more than enough.
‘There has been a reduction in demand and the current production of OPEC is more than the market can absorb,’ he said.
The minister was in London to drum up international interest in investing in Iraq’s oilfields.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has called an emergency meeting for Nov. 18 in Vienna to discuss the impact of the global financial crisis on oil markets.
How Ironic. If Iran is bribing Iraqi politicians, General Odierno: Iran ‘Bribing Iraqi Politicians’, who else are they bribing?
….from yesterday
Various Gulf OPEC Producers Break Low Even Price Except Iran
And also unreported from yesterday…
Iran predicts OPEC to cut output at November meeting
From Sunday….
TEHRAN (AFP)  Iran on Sunday predicted that OPEC would cut oil output at its November meeting in Vienna, the state-run television news website reported.
“OPEC will probably seek a cut in its production at the November meeting in order to balance supply and demand,” Iran’s OPEC representative Mohammad Ali Khatibi was quoted as saying.
“No one is expecting an increase in production at the upcoming meeting. It is clear everyone thinks of a decrease in production and that the market needs to be managed,” said Khatibi, whose country is the cartel’s second-largest producer.
On Thursday, OPEC announced it would hold an emergency meeting in Vienna on November 18, as member countries fret over the effects of the global financial crisis on crude prices.
The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ next regular meeting is scheduled for December 17 in Oran, Algeria.
And on Saturday, the cartel called for tougher regulations to reduce the impact of speculative investment in the oil market that it blames for the huge volatility in crude prices.
Oil peaked at a record high above 147 dollars in July but has since plunged back below 80 dollars a barrel as the financial crisis rocking markets slows economic growth and demand for energy.
Iran has said that a price under 100 dollars per barrel was “unsuitable.”






