It is often claimed that OPEC sets the oil price and the true cost of a barrel of oil is around $2, which is equivalent to the cost of extraction of a barrel in the Middle East. These estimates of costs ignore the cost of finding and developing oil reserves. Furthermore the important cost as far as price is concerned, is not the price of the cheapest barrel but the cost of producing the marginal barrel. By limiting production OPEC has caused more expensive areas of production such as the North Sea to be developed before the Middle East has been exhausted. OPEC's power is also often overstated. Investing in spare capacity is expensive and the low oil price environment in the late 90s led to cutbacks in investment. This has meant during the oil price rally seen between 2003-2005, OPEC's spare capacity has not been sufficient to stabilise prices.
Oil demand is highly dependent on global macroeconomic conditions, so this is also an important determinant of price. Some economists claim that high oil prices have a large negative impact on the global growth. This means that the relationship between the oil price and global growth is not particularly stable although a high oil price is often thought of as being a late cycle phenomenon.
A recent low point was reached in January 1999, after increased oil production from Iraq coincided with the Asian financial crisis, which reduced demand. The prices then rapidly increased, more than doubling by September 2000, then fell until the end of 2001 before steadily increasing, reaching US $40 to US $50 per barrel by September 2004. [2] In October 2004, light crude futures contracts on the NYMEX for November delivery exceeded US $53 per barrel and for December delivery exceeded US $55 per barrel. Crude oil prices surged to a record high above $60 a barrel in June 2005, sustaining a rally built on strong demand for gasoline and diesel and on concerns about refiners' ability to keep up. This trend continued into early August 2005, as NYMEX crude oil futures contracts surged past the $65 mark as consumers kept up the demand for gasoline despite its high price.
The New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) trades crude oil (including futures contracts) and provides the basis of US crude oil pricing via WTI (West Texas Intermediate). Other exchanges also trade crude oil futures, eg the International Commodities Exchange (ICE) in London trades contracts in Brent crude. Even individuals can now trade crude oil through online trading sites margin account or their banks through structured products indexed on the Commodities markets.
See also History and Analysis of Crude Oil Prices
Top petroleum-producing countries
Source: Energy Statistics from the U.S. Government
In order of amount produced in 2004 (MMbbl/d = millions of barrels per day):
Saudi Arabia (OPEC) - 10.37 MMbbl/d
Russia - 9.27 MMbbl/d
United States 1 - 8.69 MMbbl/d
Iran (OPEC) - 4.09 MMbbl/d
Mexico 1 - 3.83 MMbbl/d
China 1 - 3.62 MMbbl/d
Norway 1 - 3.18 MMbbl/d
Canada 1 - 3.14 MMbbl/d
Venezuela (OPEC) 1 - 2.86 MMbbl/d
United Arab Emirates (OPEC) - 2.76 MMbbl/d
Kuwait (OPEC) - 2.51 MMbbl/d
Nigeria (OPEC) - 2.51 MMbbl/d
United Kingdom 1 - 2.08 MMbbl/d
Iraq (OPEC) 2 - 2.03 MMbbl/d
1 peak production already passed in this state
2 Though still a member, Iraq has not been included in production figures since 1998
In order of amount exported in 2003:
Saudi Arabia (OPEC)
Russia
Norway
Iran (OPEC)
United Arab Emirates (OPEC)
Venezuela (OPEC)
Kuwait (OPEC)
Nigeria (OPEC)
Mexico
Algeria (OPEC)
Libya (OPEC)
Note that the USA consumes almost all of its own production, whilst the UK has recently become a net-importer rather than net-exporter.
Total world production/consumption (as of 2005) is approximately 84 million barrels per day.

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