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European stimulus pushes oil higher

EUROPE'S latest attempt to revive its economy drove the price of oil 2 percent higher yesterday, reversing a sharp, two-day drop.

Benchmark US crude finished at US$79.76 per barrel in New York. Crude is still down more than 5 percent for the week, however. Brent crude, which is used to price oil imported by many US refineries, climbed US$1.75 to end at US$90.98 a barrel in London.

Prices rose after leaders of Germany, France, Italy and Spain said they would push for a US$163 billion stimulus package. The 17-nation eurozone has been burdened for years by a mountain of debt, and European leaders have been looking for ways to encourage growth. Even a small improvement in Europe's flagging economy could boost energy demand and increase oil consumption.

Meanwhile, traders kept an eye on a gathering storm in the Gulf of Mexico that could interrupt oil supplies. The National Hurricane Center said a system off the Yucatan Peninsula and western Cuba could strengthen into a tropical storm over the weekend, possibly disrupting production platforms in the Gulf.

Royal Dutch Shell said yesterday the storm may force it to suspend some operations and evacuate some workers in the Gulf, but so far it doesn't expect the storm to impact production from its wells.

"Even if the storm doesn't do any major damage, it could still slow down imports," coming in on ships, said Phil Flynn, an analyst with Price Group.

Oil prices tumbled earlier this week on signs of a weakening economy. If businesses and people use less energy, demand for oil falls. Rising supplies are also weighing on prices. US supplies are at their highest level in 22 years, thanks to a production boom in North America.

As the price of oil fell this week, it pulled down the price of US gasoline and other petroleum-based fuels.

Pump prices fell by 7 cents this week to a national average of US$3.45 a gallon (91 cents a liter), according to AAA, Wright Express and Oil Price Information Service. The cost of regular is down 48 cents per gallon from an April peak.

Drivers paid about 14 cents less for a gallon of gasoline than they did in the same week last year. The drop, combined with falling consumption this year, means American drivers are spending roughly US$124 million less per day for gas.

In other energy futures trading, heating oil rose nearly a penny to finish at US$2.5337 per gallon, while wholesale gasoline almost rose 2 cents to end at US$2.5699 per gallon. Natural gas rose by 4.3 cents to end the week at US$2.6250 per 1,000 cubic feet.



 

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