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Iran says too early to call OPEC's Dec. meet



By Simon Webb
16 November 2007 @ 08:04 am ET

RIYADH - Iran Oil Minister Gholamhossein Nozari said on Friday it was too early to predict what action OPEC might take when it meets in early December, leaving the door open for a possible production rise to cool prices.

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Asked if he expected OPEC to raise output at its December 5 meeting in Abu Dhabi, he told Reuters: "It's too early to say, we will look at it in December."

"The oil price is not as high as it seems to be, due to the weakness of the U.S. dollar," Nozari said in an interview, echoing views that the falling greenback has bolstered the attraction of investing in the oil and commodities markets.

The dollar has been weakening since 2001, but its fall has hastened this year, spurring a wave of investment into the oil complex as a hedge against inflation. Oil has risen nearly 40 percent since mid-August, hitting a record $98.62 last week.

Nigeria's oil minister also said a production rise could be discussed in Abu Dhabi, but Venezuelan oil minister Rafael Ramirez, one of the group's traditionally hawkish members who favors higher prices, said there was no need for more oil.

Nozari was quoted earlier this week saying that oil supplies were sufficient and that more OPEC crude would not help bring down prices. On Friday he suggested that consumer nations lower fuel taxes if they wanted to ease the pain of near $100 oil.

"If they are really concerned about high oil prices affecting the economy, they have to do something about the tax level," he said.

Nozari also said that Iran was receiving close to 70 percent of its oil export revenues in non-dollar denominated currencies.

The amount varies monthly and that any future changes in how Iran prices its oil would depend on the performance of the dollar, said Nozari, who is in the Saudi capital for the OPEC heads of state, oil and finance ministers summit.

A senior official with National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) told Reuters in September that Iran, locked in a row with Washington over its nuclear work, aimed to raise oil export earnings in non-dollar currencies to 80 percent by end-October.

Copyright 2009 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.

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