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Oil slides on Mideast truce, BP Alaska pledge
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 14 - 08 - 2006


Oil fell on Monday as a truce
took effect to end fighting between Israel and Hizbollah,
easing concern about supply from a region that pumps a third of
the world's oil, Reuters reported.
Prices also slipped as BP said it would keep half its
Prudhoe Bay oilfield, the largest in North America, pumping
while it carries out pipeline repairs instead of shutting down
the entire field.
"These developments, one on the geopolitical side and one
on the actual supply side, both remove a bit of support for
prices," said Mike Wittner of investment bank Calyon. "The
price action so far is understandable."
U.S. crude settled 82 cents weaker at $73.53 after dropping
to $72.60, the lowest since July 20. London Brent lost $1.33 to
trade at $74.30.
Prices fell 41 cents in New York last week, pressured by an
alleged aircraft bomb plot that raised fears of a cut in air
travel and supported by BP's move to shut Prudhoe Bay in
Alaska.
Heavy fighting in southern Lebanon stopped abruptly on
Monday after a U.N.-brokered truce came into effect, but the
shooting of two Hizbollah guerrillas by Israeli soldiers
underlined the fragility of the calm.
Security sources in south Lebanon said Israeli air strikes
and artillery fire continued until just a few minutes before
the truce took effect at 0500 GMT.
Oil traders fear that a prolonged war could draw in
regional producers such as Syria or Iran, both supporters of
Hizbollah.
Brent has dropped from a record high of $78.65 hit last
week and prices may have further to fall for now, dealers
said.
"We're not talking about them collapsing," said Christopher
Bellew, a broker at Bache Financial. "There's no reason why
prices shouldn't come down to $71 or $72 or $70, talking about
Brent."
Contributing to oil's drop, BP said at the weekend it had
decided to keep pumping oil from the western half of Prudhoe
Bay since pipeline corrosion in the west was less severe.
As of Saturday it was pumping about 150,000 barrels per day
(bpd) from Prudhoe Bay and expected to ramp up output to
200,000 bpd -- half of full capacity -- after it completes
maintenance.
"The sting in that event is obviously less than it was,"
said Tobin Gorey, commodity strategist at Commonwealth Bank of
Australia.
U.S. pipeline regulators gave BP clearance to use the
western lines Thursday, raising hopes that U.S. West Coast
refiners would be less strained over the last month of the
driving season.
The other half of Prudhoe Bay is expected to be offline for
months, possibly until early next year. BP said Monday it
does not yet have a timetable for restarting the eastern half.
Oil is up almost 20 percent this year as Nigerian militants
earlier cut about a quarter of the country's supplies. Fellow
OPEC member Iran's row with the West over its nuclear work has
also kept dealers on edge over a wider outage.
Royal Dutch Shell last week restored 180,000 bpd of Bonny
Light crude production in Nigeria after a pipeline leak, but
more than 400,000 bpd -- shut since February -- remained
offline.


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