OPEC Keeps Oil Output Targets On Hold

OPEC oil ministers have agreed to maintain their present oil output ceiling, signaling satisfaction with prices. But they have again failed to elect a new secretary general because of rivalries between Saudi Arabia and arch-rival Iran. An OPEC statement said the ministers agreed to aim at producing 30 million barrels a day.

VIENNA (AP) -- OPEC ministers agreed to keep their daily crude production target unchanged at a meeting Wednesday. But in a sign of internal rivalries, they failed to reach consensus on a new secretary general, a post sought by Saudi Arabia, Iran and resurgent oil-power Iraq.

The agreement to leave the production ceiling at 30 million barrels a day was expected. Actual output, however, is a million barrels higher because some countries produce above their limits.

The 12-nation Organization of the Petroleum Producing Countries is expected to continue breaching the ceiling, despite a plentiful world supply of oil. Robust U.S. production and anemic world demand due to flagging economic growth have added to the mix, resulting in unusually high crude inventories.

OPEC predicts even less demand for its oil next year in part because of consuming countries' weak economies — a concern the organization addressed in a post-meeting statement as the "biggest challenge facing global oil markets in 2013."

Yet prices remain relatively high. The average cost of the group's oil basket — a mix of grades produced by OPEC countries — has been above $100 a barrel for the last two years, a first in OPEC's history. Brent crude, which is used to price international varieties of oil, has also been well over $100 a barrel for this year and was trading at $109.63 on Wednesday, up $1.62 on the day.

Such levels cover production costs for most OPEC countries with room for profits, leaving OPEC ministers comfortable with the present output arrangement.

OPEC announced its decision to leave the output ceiling unchanged in a statement.

There was no agreement, however, on replacing Libya's Abdullah Al-Badry as OPEC secretary general — the public face of the organization between ministerial meetings and a symbol of the cohesion the group likes to project despite persistent internal rivalries.

Instead, the meeting extended him for a sixth year, making him one of the longest-serving officials in that post in OPEC's history

Saudi Arabia, OPEC's top producer and de-facto decision maker, had nominated Majid El-Muneef, a senior petroleum expert and a member OPEC's governing board. Arch-rival Iran had proposed its former oil minister Gholam Hossein Nozari, while Iraq had nominated its ex oil minister Thamir Ghadban.

Their failed candidacies reflected the divisions between OPEC's major member states, despite the cartel's outward show of unity.

A choice between Iran and the Saudis — whose disputes extend beyond oil dominance to regional political rivalries — would have further polarized the organization. Iraq, which is vying to out-produce the Saudis in the next decade, also was considered by some members to have its own agenda instead of wanting to serve OPEC.

Margaret Childs contributed to this report.

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