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Sana Abid, an analyst with KBC Energy Economics, said the differing Saudi-Nigerian point of view reflected the
''scope for discord" that could hurt the image of OPEC as acting with one voice on oil issues. ''When the stakes are raised, everyone follows their own interests, and shale oil just amplifies this," she said. Divisions also exist along political lines. Iran is losing hundreds of thousands of barrels a day in oil sales due to international embargoes related to its nuclear program. The country is angry that Saudi Arabia has sought to plug the gap left by overproducing. Saudi-Iranian rivalries also continue to stymie OPEC attempts to appoint a new secretary-general, who is the organization's voice between ministerial meetings. Friday's meeting failed to decide among three candidates: Gholam-Hossein Nozari, a former Iranian oil minister, Saudi OPEC veteran Majid El-Munif and Iraqi contender Thamir Ghadhban. That leaves Al-Badry of Libya in the post. Analyst Cornelia Meyer of MRL Corporation said the split was understandable. ''If you are Saudi you don't want Iran or vice versa," she said.
''The two are in classic competition for hegemony in the region." With Iraq oil production rebounding from wartime devastation, the Saudis were also concerned about Baghdad's candidacy because of fears Iraq could soon threaten Saudi production supremacy, she said. Iran is hurting under a U.S.-led embargo on oil sales meant to force it to curb its nuclear activities. But Iranian Oil Minister Rostam Ghasemi shrugged off the effects of sanctions, claiming that a drop in crude exports was being made up for by international sales of gasoline and other refined products. Abid, the analyst, said that, based on reported trade figures, Iran's daily production is estimated to have dropped to about 2.5 million barrels a day from 4 million barrels a day before the sanctions. But Ghasemi told reporters that "production has not changed," although he did not specify what time period he was talking about.
[Associated
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