U.S. Energy Sec: not worried by OPEC dollar debate
Bodman also told reporters that OPEC should increase output at its next meeting in Abu Dhabi in December.
The slump in the U.S. currency to record lows on global markets this month has hit export revenues of oil exporters because oil is priced in dollars.
This has prompted calls from Iran and Venezuela at an OPEC heads of state summit in Riyadh at the weekend that the oil exporting group drop the dollar and price oil against a basket of currencies instead.
Asked whether this discussion in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries was giving the United States cause for concern, Bodman said: "No."
In response to a question on how much OPEC should increase its output at the December 5 meeting, Bodman declined to answer directly but said that OECD crude oil stocks were about 100 million barrels below the five-year average.
"This is the number the market may be looking at," Bodman told reporters in London at a news briefing after addressing a British-U.S. business group.
The dollar's fall on global markets has helped to fuel oil's rally to a record $98.62 on November 7 and the rise has caused Western consumer nations to call for more OPEC supplies to cool the price.
(Reporting by Randy Fabi; Editing by Anthony Barker)
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