Trump to OPEC: 'Reduce pricing now!'
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[July 05, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump again accused the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries of driving gasoline prices higher on Wednesday and
urged the oil producer group to do more.
"The OPEC Monopoly must remember that gas prices are up & they are doing
little to help. If anything, they are driving prices higher as the
United States defends many of their members for very little $’s. This
must be a two way street. REDUCE PRICING NOW!" Trump wrote on Twitter.
The Republican president has lashed out at OPEC in recent weeks. Rising
gasoline prices could create a political headache for Trump before
November mid-term congressional elections by offsetting Republican
claims that his tax cuts and rollbacks of federal regulations have
helped boost the U.S. economy.
In a tweet on Saturday, Trump said Saudi Arabia had agreed to increase
oil output by up to 2 million barrels, an assertion that the White House
rowed back on in a subsequent statement.
The leader of Saudi Arabia, OPEC's biggest member, has assured Trump
that the kingdom can raise oil production if needed and that the country
has 2 million barrels per day of spare capacity that could be deployed
to help cool oil prices to compensate for falling output in Venezuela
and Iran.
Trump has been complaining about OPEC at the same time that Washington
is piling pressure on its European allies to stop buying Iranian oil.
Iranian OPEC Governor Hossein Kazempour Ardebili said on Thursday that
Trump had raised oil prices through his tweets.
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U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks at a "Salute to
Service" dinner held in honor of the nation's military at The
Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, U.S., July 3,
2018. REUTERS/Leah Millis
"Your tweets have increased the prices by at least $10. Please stop this
method," the Iranian oil ministry's news agency, SHANA, quoted Kazempour as
saying.
Kazempour said Trump was trying to intensify tensions between Iran and Saudi
Arabia. He also called on the United States to join world powers in a meeting
with Iran in Vienna on Friday.
Foreign ministers from the five remaining signatories of a nuclear deal between
Tehran and world powers will meet Iranian officials in the Austrian capital to
discuss how to keep the accord alive after the U.S. withdrawal from the pact.
Iran has threatened to block oil exports through a key Gulf waterway in
retaliation against any hostile U.S. action.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu; Additional reporting by Bozorgmehr Sharafedin in
London; Editing by Leslie Adler and Dale Hudson)
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