Oil prices

Published Friday August 8th, 2008
C2

NEW YORK - Oil prices jumped back above US$120 a barrel Thursday, halting a steep three-day slide after Kurdish rebels claimed responsibility for a fire at a key Turkish pipeline that supplies Western countries.

Light, sweet crude for September delivery rose $1.44 to settle at $120.02 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after prices alternated between positive and negative territory. Gasoline futures also rose, while heating oil and natural gas futures finished lower.

Crude had tumbled more than $6 over the previous three days, bringing prices $30 lower than its July high above $147 a barrel. But the contract rebounded after pro-Kurdish news agency Firat said the separatist group Kurdistan Workers' Party, known as PKK, admitted sabotaging the Turkish section of the critical Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline Tuesday night.

Turkey's state-run Anatolia news agency reported that the fire, which was said to be under control Thursday, could cause the pipeline to be shut down for up to 15 days, stoking supply worries among oil market traders.

At the pump, retail gas prices in the United States tumbled further overnight. A gallon of regular fell on average just over a penny to $3.849, more than 6 per cent off record-highs above $4 a gallon reached last month, according to auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express.

In Canada, gas averaged C$1.31026 per litre, according to price-watching website Gasbuddy.com.

Before Thursday's rally, Nymex front-month crude futures had fallen around 20 per cent, or about US$30, since reaching a record high of $147.27 on July 11. The decline comes amid mounting evidence that high energy prices are forcing Americans to cut back on driving.

The U.S. Energy Department's Energy Information Administration said Wednesday that crude supplies rose 1.7 million barrels in the week ended Aug. 1, while inventories of distillate fuel, which include diesel and heating oil, jumped 2.8 million barrels.

Meanwhile, EIA data showed gasoline stockpiles fell 4.4 million barrels last week, much more than the 1.4 million drop analysts expected. Analysts said the drop likely signals that gas distributors have taken more deliveries from refiners as the summer driving season enters its last month -- not that motorists are suddenly driving more in response to recent pullbacks in pump prices.

In Turkey, pipeline shareholder BP PLC and other oil companies declared what's called a force majeure, freeing them of contractual obligations to deliver crude.

But BP spokesman Murat Lecompte told The Associated Press a terminal on the pipeline's southern tip had some crude stocks and that westbound shipments were continuing early Thursday. He added that he did not how long stocks would last or how long the pipeline would remain shut.

The fire raised the possibility of a prolonged closure of the U.S.-backed 1,800-kilometre pipeline, which allows the West to tap oil from Azerbaijan's Caspian Sea fields, estimated to hold the world's third-largest reserves, and bypass Russia and Iran. The pipeline can pump slightly more than one million barrels of crude oil per day, or more than 1 per cent of the world's daily crude output.

"Every day that it's down, we lose about one million barrels of oil that otherwise would be available to the global market," said Jim Ritterbusch, president of energy consultancy Ritterbusch and Associates in Galena, Ill. But he doubted the shutdown would reverse oil's downward spiral of the past four weeks, saying falling demand for energy in the United States will likely keep weighing on prices.

"This advance isn't very inspiring. It looks like more of a near-term correction" after oil's recent drop, Ritterbusch said.

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