Oil prices rise as US cold snap boosts demand

Daily News Egypt
2 Min Read
The value of the foreign partner's share, crude gas and oil obtained by the EGPC, is about $700m monthly. (AFP photo)
Global oil prices rebounded on Tuesday as a cold snap in the United States boosted demand for heating fuel (AFP photo)
Global oil prices rebounded on Tuesday as a cold snap in the United States boosted demand for heating fuel
(AFP photo)

AFP – Global oil prices rebounded on Tuesday as a cold snap in the United States boosted demand for heating fuel, analysts said.

New York’s main contract West Texas Intermediate for February delivery rose 37 cents to $93.80 a barrel.

Brent North crude gained also 37 cents to stand at $107.10 in London deals.

Both contracts closed lower on Monday as a Libyan oil field stepped up production after the government convinced residents to lift a five-month blockade.

Desmond Chua, analyst at traders CMC Markets, said the cold weather in the United States was supporting demand for heating fuel.

“More oil is being used for heating and we do see an increase in the basic demands for necessities,” he told AFP.

Dangerously cold Arctic air has swept across a huge swath of the United States, making travel treacherous, forcing schools to close and prompting officials to urge residents to stay indoors.

A shift in a weather pattern known as the “polar vortex” triggered a drastic drop in temperatures to lows not seen in two decades, and coincided with wind chill warnings in much of the east of the country.

US demand is a key driver for crude prices as it is the world’s largest economy and the biggest oil consuming nation.

Prices however are likely to be under downward pressure over the longer term owing to ample supplies and an expected stabilisation in demand, analysts have said.

Production at Libya’s Al-Sharara oilfield rose to 207,000 barrels per day on Monday, up from 60,000 on Saturday, according to a Libyan oil official.

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