skip to main content

US crude hits record on supply fears

Oil - Higher consumption
Oil - Higher consumption

The price of New York crude soared  to a record high point of $78.71 per barrel today, after the US government said that American crude reserves had  tumbled last week.

The record- which smashed the previous all-time high of $78.40 set on July 13, 2006 - came after the US Department of Energy  revealed that US crude inventories sank by 6.5 million barrels in  the week ending July 27.

However, in London today the price of Brent North Sea crude for September  delivery fell 53 cents to $76.52 per barrel.

Oil prices have risen by 28% since the beginning of the year.

However, that has not slowed the strong growth in consumption, bolstered by economic growth in the United States and Asia.

Fuelled by fierce global demand and tight supplies, oil prices  in London and New York have rocketed over the past two months by $12 to reach above $78 a barrel.

Today's new US record smashed the previous all-time high of $78.40 that was set on July 13, 2006, amid violence between Israel  and Lebanon in the oil-rich Middle East.

It also beat London Brent's historic high point of $78.64 per barrel, which was set on August 7, 2006, after a pipeline spill  forced British firm BP to close output from Prudhoe Bay, the biggest  oil field in the United States.

Surging prices have sparked repeated calls from the  International Energy Agency for the OPEC oil producers' grouping to  hike output in order to calm the market.

However, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries OPEC, which  pumps about 40% of global crude oil supplies, has insisted  that recent oil price gains are due to geopolitical reasons and not  tight global supplies.

The cartel holds its next output meet on September 11. At its last meeting in March, OPEC decided to hold its official  production quota at 25.8 million barrels of oil per day.