OPEC holds output steady

By Tarek El-Tablawy And Adam Schreck

Associated Press

Published: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 7:33 a.m. MST

LUANDA, Angola — OPEC held its output quotas unchanged Tuesday, several ministers said as the producer group called for greater compliance from some members whose overproduction could undercut efforts to support prices amid a fragile global economic recovery.

The announcement by delegates representing several of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries' members reflected the producer group's cautious approach to balancing the market this year — at once dealing with weak demand and an oversupply while trying sustain the rebound in prices. In the end, the 12-member group decided that no action was the best action in a market where the pace of the world's recovery from its worst recession in decades remains uncertain.

"No change," said Shukri Ghanem, the head of Libya's National Oil Corp. and the North African nation's de facto oil minister, following Tuesday's brisk meeting in the Angolan capital, Luanda.

But Ghanem stressed that the group which supplies more than a third of the world's crude was unhappy with how some members have exceeded their production limits.

"Yes, we are talking about compliance. We are calling for member compliance," Ghanem said.

Ministers from several other OPEC nations, including Algeria, the United Arab Emirates and Angola, all confirmed that the group was not changing its quotas. The comments came hours before the formal announcement was to be made.

The decision to hold steady — or "rollover" production — targets was widely expected. The significance may be in that a group which has often been accused of ogling high prices without regard for the consequences has shown a strong measure of understanding for the prevailing economic worries.

After announcing a series of cuts by the end of last year aimed at curbing its supply by 4.2 million barrels per day, OPEC has resisted a similar urge in its three other meetings this year.

In part, that stems from the sharp recovery in crude prices, which are currently around $74 per barrel — or more than double their lows in the mid-$30s the past year.

"The OPEC people, they follow this stuff. ... They know demand is still weak," said analyst and trader Stephen Schork. "They'll take $75 a barrel. But given how precarious the situation is, they'd take $65 a barrel too if that would spur economic recovery in their clients."

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