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Oil price ‘threat to recovery’
An energy watchdog group is warning the high price of oil is threatening
the fragile global recovery.
(FT)
-- High oil prices threaten to derail the fragile economic recovery among
developed nations this year, the leading energy watchdog has warned,
putting pressure on the Opec oil cartel to increase production.
Over the past year the oil import costs for the 34 mostly rich
countries that make up the Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development have soared by $200bn to $790bn at the end of 2010,
according to an analysis by the International Energy Agency.
The increase, due to high crude prices, is equal to a loss of income
of about 0.5 per cent of OECD gross domestic product, according to
the IEA.
"Oil prices are entering a dangerous zone for the global economy,"
said Fatih Birol, the IEA's chief economist. "The oil import bills
are becoming a threat to the economic recovery. This is a wake-up
call to the oil consuming countries and to the oil producers."
Oil prices have edged closer to $100 a barrel in recent weeks and
Brent crude hit $95 a barrel for the first time in 27 months on
Monday as the economic recovery has gathered pace.
Although oil prices dropped on Tuesday, the warning from the IEA
will put pressure on Opec to increase its production. Despite the
high prices, oil ministers decided last month to leave their quotas
unchanged.
Ali Naimi, the Saudi oil minister, repeated at the time that he
favoured an oil price of "$70 to $80 a barrel" and that there were
no plans to convene an extraordinary meeting before June 2 this
yeaOilr.
However, according to Mr Birol, "it is not in the interest of anyone
to see such high prices".
OECD countries account for about 65 per cent of all global oil
imports, he said. "Oil exporters need clients with healthy economies
but these high prices will sooner or later make the economies sick,
which would mean the need for importing oil will be less."
In the very short term, therefore, "it may not be a bad idea that
the producers are ready to increase production and show their
understanding that these high prices are not good for the global
economy," he added.
Oil consuming nations, meanwhile, need to accelerate their efforts
to reduce their reliance on oil, especially for transportation, he
said. According to the IEA's analysis, the European Union has seen
its import bill rise by $70bn during 2010, equal to the combined
budget deficits of
On top of the high crude prices,
The US, meanwhile, has seen its bill jump by $72bn. Japan, which
imports more than 99 per cent of its energy needs from oil, gas and
coal, is paying an additional $27bn. Less developed nations are also
being hit, seeing their bill rise by $20bn, equal to a loss of
income of almost 1 per cent of GDP.
The ratio of countries' oil import bills to GDP, a key measure of
the cost of oil prices on economies, is close to levels last seen
during the financial crisis in 2008, Mr Birol warned.
If oil prices remain above $90/barrel for the rest of this year then
the ratio for the European Union will be 2.1 per cent -- close to
the 2.2 per cent level it reached in 2008.
"It is a very telling story. 2010 rang the first alarm bells and
2011 price levels could bring us to the same financial crisis times
that we saw in 2008," said Mr Birol.
Posted on Tue, Jan 4, 2011, 2:26 pm by The Financial Times
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