World needs record Saudi oil supply as OPEC convenes

Just six months ago, energy analysts predicted output from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries would climb too high and Saudi Arabia needed to cut to make room for other suppliers. They changed their minds after production from Libya, Iran and Iraq failed to rebound as anticipated, and industrialized nations' stockpiles fell to the lowest for the time of year since 2008. Saudi Arabia may need to pump a record 11 million barrels a day by December to cover the other member nations, says Energy Aspects Ltd., a consulting firm, Bloomberg reports. "Now it's not whether the Saudis will make room, but whether they'll keep it going and maintain enough spare capacity," said Jamie Webster, a Washington-based analyst at IHS Inc., an industry researcher. "OPEC is increasingly having a hard time just doing its job of bringing all the barrels needed." Even as the North American shale revolution propels U.S. production to a three-decade peak, supply in other parts of the world is faltering. A battle for political control in Libya, pipeline attacks in Iraq and prolonged sanctions against Iran are preventing those nations from reviving output. While U.S. crude inventories rose to a record in April, restrictions on exports are keeping those supplies in the country, tempering forecasts that global oil prices will decline this year.