10/26/2009 (9:33 pm)
Iran says committed to crude production quota: report
Iran has always adhered to its implied output target under OPEC’s existing output curbs and has not violated its commitments, its OPEC governor Mohammad Ali Khatibi told the semi-official Mehr news agency on Saturday.
The most recent Reuters survey of oil firms, OPEC officials and analysts showed Iran, the group’s second-largest producer, pumped 430,000 barrels above its OPEC target in September, the most in absolute terms of any member.
“Iran has always been committed to crude production quotas set by OPEC and there has never been any violation by Iran in this respect,” Khatibi said.
Khatibi said reports by the International Energy Agency (IEA) and other secondary sources are based on “guesswork and not reliable.”
“The point to be noticed is that the figures reported by these sources are completely incompatible with one another.”
OPEC agreed late last year to lower supply by 4.2 million barrels per day (bpd) as recession curbed fuel use and led to a slide in prices.
But the Reuters survey showed the group met 63 percent of promised cutbacks in September, down from 68 percent in August, continuing a trend of rising output that shows some members have relaxed adherence amid higher oil prices.
Iran has long been one of the group’s members most interested in higher prices.
The world’s fifth-largest crude exporter has struggled for years to develop its oil and gas reserves and now has to contend with an international lack of credit, as well as the U.N. nuclear sanctions over its disputed nuclear program.
SANCTIONS
A report by a parliamentary research center, published on Saturday by Iran’s Aftab-e Yazd daily, said Iran’s crude oil exports will “drop to zero” in eight years in the absence of an annual $4.5 billion in investment in the oil sector.
The authorities blame sanctions for the lack of foreign investment in the country’s energy sector.
Iran also lacks sufficient refining capacity to meet its domestic demand and imports up to 40 percent of its gasoline requirements.
It subsidizes gasoline, which is therefore among the world’s cheapest, encouraging fast growth in demand and making it very reliant on imports from international markets.
However, Iran’s deputy oil minister Noureddin Shahnazizadeh said gasoline production had increased in the country.
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