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New supply worries put oil over $133

Oil prices - Norway facility closed over weekend
Oil prices - Norway facility closed over weekend

Oil prices rose above $133 today as long-term supply concerns lingered and fresh production problems appeared in Nigeria and Norway.

US crude rose 95 cents to $133.14 a barrel, while London Brent crude gained $1.47 to $133.04. Oil prices have risen nearly 40% this year, topping $135 for the first time last week.

Rebels from Nigeria's oil-producing Niger Delta said they had blown up a Royal Dutch Shell pipeline, forcing the Anglo-Dutch company to shut some production. The attack was the latest act of sabotage in a campaign that has cut oil output in the world's eighth-largest producer by around a fifth since 2006.

In Europe, Norwegian oil and gas producer StatoilHydro said its Statfjord A field, which produces 19,000 barrels of oil per day, remained shut after an oil leak on Saturday.

OPEC, the source of more than a third of the world's crude, has not taken united action to raise output, but Saudi Arabia individually has said it will pump more oil. OPEC President Chakib Khelil reiterated the group would not meet to discuss the oil market until its next scheduled gathering in September, the website of the Libyan National Oil Corporation (NOC) reported.