Friday May 16 2008
All times are London time

Search Quotes in the FT.com site
FT Logo

October 8, 2007

Thirteen at Opec’s feast

Opec is to have a new member, it seems; or rather, an old one back again. Ecuador’s oil minister Galo Chiriboga said on Monday that after a 15-year absence his country intends to rejoin as soon as possible. Because Ecuador never formally quit, just let its membership lapse, all it has to do is pay a couple of years of fees that it owes: about $5m.

Ecuador, it must be remembered, is a minnow in oil terms, with output of a little over 0.5m barrels a day about half that of Opec’s lowest-producing members, Qatar and Indonesia. But getting a thirteenth member on board, following Angola last year, is another sign of Opec’s growing prestige and influence. After Ecuador, it is suggested, Sudan could be next.

We should not get carried away about the all-mighty Opec, however. Its attempt to curb oil prices that were heading towards $80 a barrel failed dismally. It seems Opec has the power to raise the price of oil, but not to cut it.

Post a comment

Comment Policy



As a final step before posting the comment, please type the two words you see in the image beloweight numbers in the audio clip; this test is to prevent automated robots from posting comments.


More FT Blogs and Forums

  • Clive Crook's blog The FT's chief Washington commentator blogs about intersection of politics and economics

  • Economists' Forum Leading economists and the FT's chief economics commentator, Martin Wolf, debate the big issues

  • Gideon Rachman's blog The FT's chief foreign affairs commentator on world issues and his travels

  • The Undercover Economist Tim Harford's blog on economics in everyday life

  • Willem Buiter's Maverecon The LSE professor blogs on 'economics, politics, ethics, religion, culture, free and open source software (FOSS), and whatever'

  • Brussels Blog By our Brussels writers

  • Westminster Blog By our UK Parliament writers

  • Dear Lucy Columnist Lucy Kellaway and readers solve your workplace woes

  • FT Tech Blog Our San Francisco and world correspondents look at the intersection of technology and business

  • Technology Policy Forum James Boyle, Richard Epstein, Eli Noam and Thomas Hazlett debate regulatory and legal issues

  • John Gapper's blog FT chief business commentator talks about business, finance, media and technology