Oil Prices

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2004-8-19

This is Gwen Outen with the VOA Special English Economics Report.

In terms of dollar value, of all the products in the world,
nothing is traded more than oil. Crude oil traded above forty-seven
dollars a barrel for the first time this week. The price a year ago
was around thirty dollars. Crude can be made into gasoline or other
products.

Oil prices are high. But the United States Energy Department
notes that they are not the highest ever if inflation is considered.
It says a barrel of oil in March of nineteen eighty-one would have
cost eighty dollars today.

Prices are high in part because of concerns about problems in
some oil-producing areas. Rebels in Iraq have attacked oil fields.
In Russia, a huge tax debt threatens the future of Yukos, the
largest Russian oil company. And in Venezuela, opponents tried but
failed this week to oust President Hugo Chavez in a national vote.

But world oil supplies were already limited because of demand.
For example, economic growth has made China into the second largest
oil user after the United States.

On August fourth, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries again voted to increase production. OPEC produces about
one-third of the world's oil. Many other countries are also
producing more. But experts say except for Saudi Arabia, world oil
production has little surplus for immediate growth. Saudi Arabia is
the largest oil exporter.

The International Energy Agency says the world oil supply reached
eighty-three point five million barrels per day in July. But the
agency expects the growth in demand for oil to slow next year. The
current levels of growth are unusually high.

A barrel of oil contains one hundred fifty-nine liters. Oil is
traded only in American dollars, but there are different kinds of
oil. The highest prices are for West Texas Intermediate. Brent Blend
is a mix of European oils; it usually costs a few dollars less. OPEC
oil prices are lower still.

Prices reported in the news are generally for future shipments of
crude oil. The New York Mercantile Exchange is the biggest energy
exchange in the world. Twenty-one years ago, it began to trade in
crude oil futures.

These financial tools usually do not involve real sales of oil.
But they can affect the prices paid at the time oil is shipped.
Futures help buyers and sellers gain from, or protect against, any
changes in the market.

This VOA Special English Economics Report was written by Mario
Ritter. This is Gwen Outen.


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