consider whether it needed to hold an emergency meeting, an OPEC delegate said on Tuesday.
At present, however, all members of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries believe the oil market is well supplied despite the loss of Libyan crude and see no need for a meeting before its next scheduled gathering on June 8.
“Until US$120 there is no reason to panic. If it goes beyond US$120, I think we would be concerned, and there may be a need to have a meeting before June,” said the delegate, who declined to be identified by name.
Earlier on Tuesday, the oil minister of Iraq called US$120 “an acceptable price” that would not hinder global growth.
Brent crude was trading just below US$116.
For now, the 12 OPEC members are united in seeing no need to meet, said the delegate.
“There is a consensus among the member-countries there is enough oil,” the delegate said. “For the moment, there no need to panic or for a meeting.”
While OPEC has not changed its formal output policy for more than two years, its members have been boosting actual supply for months in response to rising oil prices and demand.
Top world exporter Saudi Arabia has offered extra supplies to replace lost Libyan barrels and has raised its output to 9 million barrels per day (bpd), almost one million barrels per day more than its OPEC target. – Reuters.
Three envoys present letters of credence to President
Wallace Ruzvidzo, [email protected] ACCREDITED ambassadors from Bangladesh, Peru and Mauritania presented their letters of credence to President Mnangagwa at State House in Harare yesterday. The ambassadors were Shah Ahmed Shafi…



