Opec begins pivotal meet as oil prices hit fresh lows
Opec ministers met Thursday to decide whether to slash oil production amid a glut in global supplies, sending crude prices to new lows ahead of their pivotal vote.
The 12-nation oil cartel is under pressure from its poorer members like Venezuela and Ecuador to cut output as collapsing prices have slashed their precious revenues.
But its powerful Gulf members have rejected calls to turn down the taps unless they are guaranteed market share in the highly competitive arena, particularly in the United States, where a flood of oil being extracted from shale rock has in part caused the global oversupply.
"We should withdraw the overproduction from the market," Venezuelan Foreign Minister Rafael Ramirez told reporters prior to the start of the meeting.
"I worry about this meeting, about the situation. And I believe all the countries are worried about that."
Benchmark oil prices plunged to new four-year low points Thursday on growing expectations that the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries will not take significant action in Vienna, home to the cartel that pumps out about a third of the world's crude.
West Texas Intermediate for delivery in January slumped to $71.89 a barrel -- the lowest level since September 2010. It later stood at $72.10 at about 1030 GMT, down $1.59 from Wednesday's closing level.
Brent North Sea crude hit a four-year low of $75.48 a barrel. In later London deals, it stood at $75.87 a barrel, down $1.88 from Wednesday.
Crude prices have tumbled by more than 30 percent since June, depressed also by a strong dollar and worries about stalling energy demand in a weak global economy.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) had warned in a report issued mid-November that the "price rout" was not over, and that prices will keep sliding well into 2015.
Opec kingpin Saudi Arabia on Wednesday said Gulf nations had reached a consensus over what needed to happen regarding the cartel's level of supply, adding that it hoped the other members would agree.
"I am confident that Opec is capable of taking a very unified position," Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi told reporters.
Opec pumped 30.6 million oil barrels per day last month, above its 30 million bpd target according to the IEA, which advises countries on energy policy.
Some analysts believe that the cartel will on Thursday agree to trim such excess rather than cut its official ceiling.
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