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Gulf source says oil market in good shape

Gulf source says oil market in good shape

Write: Oda [2011-05-20]
The current oil market is "in good shape" and no significant price
movements are expected in a stable market if there are no unexpected
developments such as a hurricane in the US Gulf or other events that could
impact oil prices, a Gulf source said Sunday.

"Prices are not expected to go up sharply or down, unless you have an
unexpected event such as a hurricane," the source said, adding that given the
state of the market, there was no need for a change in OPEC's output targets
despite an expected weakening in demand during the third quarter.

The source noted that several of OPEC's member states were stable, citing
Nigeria and Venezuela, where tribal unrest in the Niger Delta in the former
and political developments in the latter country have at times affected the
supply/demand balance.

OPEC last met in Vienna in March and rubber-stamped an existing accord to
maintain its overall production target of 24.845 million b/d for the 11
members bound by quotas. Iraq is excluded from the quota agreement.

One potential source of market tension is Iran, OPEC's second biggest oil
producer and exporter after Saudi Arabia, given the escalation in the row over
its nuclear program, the Gulf source said.

He also said that there was no expected impact on Middle Eastern oil
production as a result of the moratorium on offshore drilling imposed by the
US administration following the Macondo oil well disaster in the US Gulf.

Offshore drilling was not expected to slow in such countries as Brazil
and West Africa, he added. "It will slow down many projects but Brazil and
West Africa will continue," he said.

However, Saudi Arabia has slowed down the 900,000 b/d Manifa heavy oil
field development project with full capacity now targeted for 2024, much
later than earlier planned.

"There is a kind of slowdown [on Manifa]. There is no extra capacity
needed. The policy is to keep existing capacity and not add any unless there
is anything urgent," the source said.

Saudi Aramco said in its 2009 annual report out earlier this month that
Manifa, in shallow waters just off the kingdom's eastern coast, is scheduled
to begin production of 500,000 b/d of Arabian Heavy Oil by June 2013 and will
ultimately produce at its full 900,000 b/d capacity by January 2024.

The Manifa increment will serve to offset natural declines in other
producing fields. Saudi Arabia's current oil production capacity stands at
12.5 million b/d.
--Kate Dourian, kate_dourian@platts.com