Monday September 4 7:16 AM ET



By Richard Mably

LONDON (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani is in little
doubt -- petroleum prices now spiralling out of control will prove a last
hoorah for OPEC oil power.

For the former Saudi oil minister, the return to $30 a barrel crude has only
hastened the day when the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
will be left staring at untouched fuel reserves, marking the end of the oil
era.

``OPEC has a very short memory. It will pay a heavy price for not acting in
1999 to control oil prices. Now it is too late,'' he said in an interview
with Reuters.

``The Stone Age came to an end not for a lack of stones and the oil age will
end, but not for a lack of oil.''

As Saudi oil minister from 1962 to 1986, Yamani, now 70, was the embodiment
of Arab oil power.

The architect of a dramatic upheaval in the world's economic order during
the 1970s' oil price explosions, his name became synonymous with OPEC.

The cartel this weekend marks the 40th anniversary of its birth in Baghdad
on September 10, 1960. Petroleum ministers meet on Sunday to decide output
policy for this winter.

Yamani says it is too late now for OPEC to refill petroleum product tanks in
the West where inventories of heating oil are running short for the northern
hemisphere's cold months.

``I think prices might go a bit higher this winter but further ahead in 2001
prices will start to come down and longer term it is horrible for OPEC,'' he
said.

Technology To Squeeze Opec

Within 20 years, he predicts, technology will have cut deep into demand for
transport fuels.

Crude will slump even more heavily than the single-digit prices seen during
the last glut, in 1998.

This year's oil price scare will feed rival non-OPEC production, suppress
demand and, most damagingly for OPEC, breed new fuel technologies.

He sees hybrid engines for automobiles and hydrogen fuel-cells drastically
cutting the consumption of gasoline while big new finds lift crude flows
from non-OPEC nations.

``Technology is a real enemy for OPEC. Technology will reduce consumption
and increase production from areas outside OPEC.''

``The real victims will be countries like Saudi Arabia with huge reserves
which they can do nothing with -- the oil will stay in the ground for
ever.''

OPEC, said Yamani, had failed to learn the lessons of the series of gluts
and shortages which have marked its turbulent history.

Its leading negotiator during the oil price rises of OPEC's heyday, Yamani
says his warnings against pushing crude too high went unheeded.

``I will never forget. It was 1979. I was in Caracas and I said that at this
price -- it was $28 a barrel at the time -- OPEC production will drop, OPEC
countries will fight each other. I said production has to be raised to lower
prices. They said I was crazy.''

While Saudi Arabia, sitting on 100 years of reserves, now favors prices no
higher than $25 a barrel, fellow OPEC members remain keen to squeeze their
customers for as much short-term revenue as possible.

``There are some members in OPEC who always tried to resist extra
production -- like Venezuela, Iran, Libya. In OPEC, from day one that has
not changed,'' said Yamani.

Leading Role In Producer Sovereignty

Yamani remains proud of his role in wresting power over petroleum revenues
from the oil majors, the assertion of OPEC's central objective --
sovereignty by the exporting countries over their resources.

He cites the Tehran Agreement of February 1971, when the oil companies
abandoned their long-standing 50-50 share of revenues to cede the Gulf
producers a majority return of 55 percent.

``That was a big step forward for OPEC,'' he said.

And then on October 16, 1973 just days after the start of the Arab-Israeli
war, Yamani and five other Gulf OPEC petroleum ministers took charge for the
first time of the price of oil.

Unilaterally they lifted posted crude prices, previously set by the oil
companies, by 70 percent to over $5 a barrel.

``Prices were now fixed by producers. Now we were masters of our own
resources,'' remembers Yamani.

The following day Saudi King Faisal sanctioned the Arab oil embargo to
punish the West for its support of Israel.

Within months oil prices had trebled and the industrialized world was tipped
into the sort of recession which some economists fear could be repeated
again if oil prices do not ease soon.

Carlos The Jackal

Yamani, born in Mecca in 1930, remains a devout Muslim despite daunting
personal experience.

He was present in 1975 when an assassin shot his mentor, Saudi King Faisal.

Later that year he was among ministers taken hostage and held to ransom at
OPEC headquarters in Vienna by the guerrilla Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, alias
Carlos 'the Jackal'.

Taken on flights to Algiers, Tripoli and then back to Algiers Yamani was
told that he and the Iranian oil minister irrevocably had been sentenced to
death.

``Carlos told me I would die. I was sure I would die. I wrote my will. I was
prepared.''

Famed for his softly-spoken negotiating skills, Yamani also was a favorite
with the press.

``Often they knew more about OPEC affairs then the ministers they were
questioning,'' he said.


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