The forum topic here shows that Prince Turki Al-Faisal, Ambassador of Saudi Arabia to the US said that SA is now producing at its maximum output. (He did however state that SA intends to increase output in the next few years when some projects come on line)
Yesterday (17 Apr 2006) Qatar’s Oil Minister Abdullah Al Attiyah said. “On production there is nothing we (OPEC) can do. We are already producing at maximum output. There is no shortage in supply." Link
Stephen Brown, director of energy economics with the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas says in the key article here "Saudi Arabian production is at maximum levels and the only extra production that country could offer is the heavier crudes ... and the refineries set up to handle that heavier crude are full." He also hints that we will have high prices for maybe 5-10 years since it takes time for demand destruction for something as key as crude oil to kick in.
We should not forget 8%/ 2% decline comments from the Platts report here a while back.
It seems to me that as soon as an industry figure says anything interesting, their comments are deconstructed and analysed by forum "experts" until the original message is lost.
At what point do we put our spreadsheets, maps, data tables and pretty graphs aside and simply LISTEN to what Saudi Arabia and OPEC are trying to tell us?






