Peak Oil News

 

  Login or Register
 
Menu
 News
 Search
 Topics
 Stories Archive
 Submit News
 Discussions
 Code of Conduct
 Forums
 Peak Blog
 Resources
 About Us
 Downloads
 Web Links
 PeakWiki
 Members
 Your Account
 Members List
 Ignore List
 JOIN!
 Private Messages
 
Sponsors
Forex Reviews
User Comments

Training
Managed Accounts
Forex Broker
 
Member Quotes
I'm just saying that you shouldn't test an anti-gravity device by jumping off the top of a building.

BigTex

Suggest Quote

 
PeakSpeak
NICKNAME

Download TeamSpeak
What is PeakSpeak?
Peak Oil on IRC
 
Photo Album
Submit Photo
Peakoil.com is You!


member photos
 
PO Email!
 
The strain of $100 oil for Gulf states
Consumption; Demand; PricesPleas from the US for Opec to pump more oil have fallen on the deaf ears of Opec ministers as oil prices stay above $100 a barrel. But this may be about to change, even if there’s no official shift in Opec policy.

A weak dollar is putting the economies of Opec’s most powerful members, the Arabian Gulf nations, under such pressure they may be ready to sacrifice dollar income for more economic and political stability at home.

Pumping more oil to bring prices down would help strengthen the dollar and eliminate the need for Opec’s Gulf members to sever ties to the US currency.

In fact, $100 oil is turning into a curse as the dollar has slumped about 15% against the euro in the past year as oil prices have doubled. Saudi Arabia, Opec’s most influential member and owner of the world’s largest reserves, is struggling with the rising cost of imports. Inflation hit a 27-year high of 8.7% last month. Qatar has the Gulf’s highest inflation rate at 13.7%.

As for the UAE, Opec’s third largest oil producer after Saudi Arabia and Iran, which markets itself as the Gulf’s most liberal economy has had to introduce price caps on 14 basic foods.

Thousands of South Asian workers went on the rampage there last week, complaining about rising costs and low wages made worse by the dollar’s slide against the Indian rupee. The UAE dirham is fixed at 3.67 to the dollar.

The region’s central bankers are under pressure to abandon a dollar peg for their currencies or revalue to ease imported inflation. But most are reluctant to end a policy of fixed rates dating back to the 1970s while oil, which accounts for more than 80% of export earnings, remains priced in dollars.

Gulf Times

Posted on Wednesday, March 26 @ 06:19:10 EDT by waegari
 
Related Links
· More about Consumption; Demand; Prices
· News by waegari


Most read story about Consumption; Demand; Prices:
Forget About Cheap Oil

 
Article Rating
Average Score: 3
Votes: 2


Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad

 
Options

 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly

 Send to a Friend Send to a Friend

 
Associated Topics

Business News; Market ResearchPublic Policy; Political and Legal News

"Login" | Login/Create an Account | 0 comments
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please register

Atom News FeedRSS 1.0 News FeedRSS 2.0 News FeedRSS Forums Feed