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Oil prices slide beneath $116

Aug 08 2008 11:24

London - Crude prices slumped below $116 a barrel on Friday as the market shrugged off confirmation that separatist Kurdish rebels were behind a blast that has cut a strategic oil pipeline in Turkey.


Brent North Sea crude for September delivery shed $1.91 to $115.99 per barrel in electronic deals.


New York's main contract, light sweet crude for September delivery dropped $1.73 to $118.29 a barrel.


The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline at Refahiye in eastern Turkey has been on fire since the blast on Tuesday and was expected to be closed for about two weeks.


The separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) said on Friday that the explosion was "an act of sabotage" by its militants, according to a report on the website of the Firat news agency which is close to the rebels.


World oil prices had rebounded back above $120 on Thursday on news that the pipeline carrying crude from Central Asia to the West would remain shut for about 15 days.


The BTC was inaugurated in 2006, carrying oil from the Caspian Sea fields to Turkey's Mediterranean port of Ceyhan, from where tankers transport the crude to Western markets.


Despite modest price gains on Thursday, the oil market has dived lower this week on mounting concern that slower economic growth in the United States would translate into lower global energy demand.


Slowing global economy


On Monday, prices slumped under $120 a barrel in New York and London for the first time in three months, as a tropical storm looked set to miss energy installations in the Gulf of Mexico.


The US government meanwhile reported US consumer spending, which fuels two-thirds of output, had cooled in June and inflationary pressures accelerated.


Prices extended their slide on Tuesday as signs of a slowing global economy raised further doubts about demand.


The US Federal Reserve held its short-term interest rate unchanged at 2.0%, citing lacklustre growth in the world's largest economy and inflation worries.


The United States is the world's biggest energy user and slowing consumer spending tends to weigh on global oil demand projections.


Crude futures also lost ground on Wednesday after news of a surprise jump in US oil reserves, traders said.


The US Department of Energy announced in its weekly report that American crude reserves had increased by 1.7 million barrels in the week ended August 1.


The reading caught the market off guard because expectations had been for a 200 000-barrel decline.


Traders are closely tracking the level of US gasoline stockpiles amid the ongoing peak-demand summer driving season, when many Americans take to the roads for their summer holidays.


Oil futures have shed about 20% in value since hitting record highs above $147 per barrel on July 11.


- AFP

 

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George
Aug 08 2008 13:15 Report this comment

They should have never released the increase last time around the way they dod, instead just have said new price is R10,40 and this time around say it is R10,20. Some of the pumps that were at R10,40 are now at R10,13 so I get an extra 7c of petrol free per litre when I fill up.....every little helps.
 
Oom_Kosie
Aug 08 2008 12:17 Report this comment

The 20c-instead-of-27c-thing is really not that complicated. Last month the price was raised by 7c less than it should have been, owing to the fact that the prices have to end on a 0 for the older pumps. This month the loss that was incurred with that measure has to be recouped. It is very simple and nobody is being cheated. Go look on www.dme.gov.za for more explanations.
 
JR
Aug 08 2008 12:13 Report this comment

Its too early to make a call , but IF oil prices and R/$ remains at todays levels then me might see +/ R1 decrease on petrol and +-R1.10 decrease on Diesel.
 
Carl
Aug 08 2008 11:51 Report this comment

More like 20c, knowing our leaders
 
sunny
Aug 08 2008 11:40 Report this comment

You go boy..maybe we can get R2 off per litre next month?
 
 
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