The price of oil rose to a 30-month high on Thursday as fighters  loyal to Moammar Gadhafi pushed back rebels from key areas in eastern  Libya.
Benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude rose $2.45, more  than 2 percent, to settle at $106.72 a barrel on the New York Mercantile  Exchange. At one point it hit $106.83, the highest it's been since  September, 2008. In London, Brent crude rose $2.25 to settle at $117.20  per barrel.
Battles between Gadhafi's troops and rebels have  seesawed back and forth in Libyan ports and towns since mid-February,  with the price of oil rising more than $20 a barrel since then. Energy  consultants Cameron Hanover said traders are beginning to view the Libya  uprising as a standoff for now. 'Without control of the air, Gadhafi's  troops have been unable to hammer home their gains. And, without strong  and well-trained ground forces, the rebels seem incapable of holding  onto their gains. Optimism that Libyan oil might return to the market,  seen earlier this week, was dashed."
Libya's oil exports, which  went mainly to Europe, are shut down. The rebels have said they plan to  start shipping oil again, although how soon that could happen is  unclear. Libya exported only about 1.6 million barrels of oil a day, or 2  percent of global consumption, but energy traders worry that unrest  will spread across the region to disrupt shipments from OPEC countries  like Saudi Arabia and Iran. The Saudis are the biggest oil producers in  the world, supplying about 8.4 million barrels a day. Iran produces more  than 4 million barrels a day. Anti-government protests in those  countries so far have been limited, although unrest continues in Syria,  Bahrain and Yemen.
Meanwhile the Saudis are making good on a  promise to make up for the deficit of Libyan oil. "Saudi Arabia is  beginning to supply European oil companies with crude oil to help  alleviate the shortfall from Libya," said Addison Armstrong, senior  director of market research at Tradition Energy. "Saudi Arabian Oil Co.  has sold three shipments of light, sweet crude for March and April  delivery: two to Austrian oil company OMV AG and one to BP."
The  Energy Department's Energy Information Administration released its  weekly report on natural gas supplies on Thursday. It showed that the  United States' abundant reserves grew by 12 billion cubic feet from the  week before, to 1.624 trillion cubic feet. That is 4.4 percent above the  five-year average.
"Shale plays have fundamentally altered the  amount of domestic supply available, leading to large weekly  injections," said energy analyst Stephen Schork, who writes the daily  Schork Report newsletter.
The EIA estimates that the country has  827 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in shale formations. In all, EIA  estimates the U.S. has 2,552 trillion cubic feet of potential natural  gas resources, enough to satisfy the nation's annual demand for 110  years. The agency expects that to rise in coming years as more shale  resources are discovered.
Natural gas contracts rose 3.4 cents to  settle at $4.389 per 1,000 cubic feet. In other Nymex trading, heating  oil added 5.91 cents to settle at $3.1125 per gallon, and gasoline  futures gained 5.04 cents to settle at $3.1077 per gallon.
taken from http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Oil-climbs-to-highest-since-apf-1947152419.html?x=0&sec=topStories&pos=main&asset=&ccode=
 
 
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