- Join the France 24 community here
- Log in
OPEC should order a "substantial" cut in oil output at next week's emergency meeting in Vienna, Algerian Energy Minister and current OPEC chief Chakib Khelil said Saturday.
"There will be a reduction in production at the next extraordinary meeting of OPEC, and it will have to be a substantial one to get the balance right between supply and demand," he told reporters.
"If it has to be 1.5 million barrels per day, or two million barrels per day, that's what it will be," Khelil added, during a visit to the southern Algerian province of Tamanrasset.
Khelil said that OPEC wanted to see oil prices "remain stable" throughout the first half of 2009.
The fall in demand is being driven by lower consumption in the big markets like the US, with global demand having fallen by three million bpd, he added.
"We want a stable price per barrel -- neither too high, nor too low, between 70 and 90 dollars," Khelil said.
Iran -- OPEC's second largest exporter -- also called Saturday for a significant cut amid prospects of reduced demand in the face of the global economic slowdown, the state broadcaster reported.
OPEC has announced it will hold an extraordinary meeting earlier than expected next Friday -- instead of in November -- to discuss the global financial crisis and its impact on the oil market.
Oil prices had reached a peak of 147 dollars a barrel earlier this year but slumped below 70 dollars on Thursday for the first time in more than a year.
Prices rebounded above 71 dollars a barrel on Friday on speculation that OPEC could cut production at the emergency meeting, traders said.

























