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Oil rises on modest Saudi increase
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-06-24 00:28

NEW YORK -- Oil prices rose Monday on disappointment over Saudi Arabia's modest production increase and concerns that output from Nigeria will decline. Retail gas prices, meanwhile, inched lower overnight, but appear unlikely to change much as long as oil prices remain stuck in their recent trading range.


Saudi King Abdullah (L) and Kuwaiti Minister of Oil and Electricity and Water, Mohammed al-Olaim greet each other in Jeddah June 22, 2008. The world's largest oil exporter Saudi Arabia proposed on Sunday creating a $1 billion OPEC fund and offered $500 million in Saudi soft loans to help poor countries cope with high oil prices. [Agencies]

Saudi Arabia said Sunday at a meeting of oil producing and consuming nations that it would turn out more crude oil this year if the market needs it. The kingdom said it would add 200,000 barrels per day in July to a 300,000 barrel per day production increase it first announced in May, raising total daily output to 9.7 million barrels.

But that pledge at the meeting held in the Saudi city of Jeddah fell far short of US hopes for a larger increase. The United States and other nations argue that oil production has not kept up with increasing demand. Saudi Arabia and other OPEC countries say there is no shortage of oil and instead blame financial speculation and the falling US dollar.

"The Jeddah meeting became a non-event," said Linda Rafield, senior oil analyst at Platts, the energy research arm of McGraw-Hill Cos. "There was no surprise."

Light, sweet crude for August delivery rose $1.20 to $136.56 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Saudi Arabia did say it would work to boost its long-term production capacity.

"Obviously, the Saudis are concerned, and that could be a bearish factor," said Andrew Lebow, senior vice president at MF Global LLC in New York.

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