Oil declines from record highs of $88 bbl but fears about Turkish move into Iraq continues to worry traders; inventory report awaited

Released on: October 17, 2007, 7:32 am

Press Release Author: Tri-Coastal Oil and Gas Ltd.

Industry: Energy

Press Release Summary: Seoul, Republic of Korea, Oil prices retreated Wednesday from
record highs above $88 a barrel overnight amid expectations a fuel report due later
in the day would show U.S. crude and gasoline stocks rose last week.


Press Release Body: Still, prices remained supported by concerns a Turkish incursion
into Iraq in search of Kurdish rebels could disrupt crude supplies.

Light, sweet crude for November delivery dropped 32 cents to $87.29 a barrel in
Europe in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The contract rose $1.48 to close at a record $87.61 a barrel Tuesday in the U.S.
after climbing as high as $88.20, a trading record.

December Brent crude dropped 45 cents to $83.10 a barrel on the ICE futures exchange
in London.

Turkey\'s parliament is expected Wednesday to agree that the government can launch a
cross-border attack into Iraq sometime over the next year.

The government has said an offensive against the rebels in northern Iraq will not
immediately follow the authorization.

An incursion would threaten the pipeline that runs from Kirkuk, in Iraq, to the
Turkish export terminal of Ceyhan.

While exports of crude from Kirkuk to Ceyhan have been sporadic since the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq in 2003, oil has been flowing the past two months and in recent
days was being shipped at a rate of nearly 500,000 barrels a day, Dow Jones
Newswires reported.

Oil prices have also been driven higher by recent reports from the Energy
Department, the International Energy Agency and the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries suggesting oil supplies are flat or falling as demand is
growing.

Tri-Coastal Oil and Gas ltd. spokesperson James Bennett also noted a \"bottleneck in
the refining sector\" was supporting prices, adding, \"the increase in world crude
distillation capacity lags behind the growth of oil product demand in 2007.\"

Despite the gains, the price of oil is still below inflation-adjusted highs hit in
early 1980.

Depending on the adjustment, a $38 barrel of oil in 1980 would be worth $96 to $101
or more today.


Web Site: http://www.tri-coastal.com

Contact Details: Tricoastal Oil and Gas Ltd.

14th Floor Kyong Am Building,
157-27 Samsung-Dong,
Kangnam-Ku, Seoul 135-090
Korea

Tel: +82-2-644-55448
Fax: +82-2-644-55449

Email: contactus@tri-coastal.com

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