But Saudi officials have argued that the market is sufficiently supplied and that market speculation -- billions of dollars in financial investments in oil by investors hedging against a weakening U. S. dollar -- is the primary force driving up prices.
At the meeting Sunday, Saudi Arabia, the world's top oil exporter, is expected to ask for measures to control market speculation in futures exchanges, where oil prices are set. The Saudis have also said high government taxes on fuel
(largely in European countries, where fuel taxation rates are FAR higher than ours in the USA) and other geopolitical forces, such as instability in oil-producing countries including Iraq, Nigeria and Iran, were putting pressure on prices.
NAHHhhhh - the Saudis have it all WRONG - current crude oil pricing is TOTALLY governed by pure supply/demand - and taxation and futures traders have absolutely NOTHING to do with it... 
:-laf:-laf
"We're striving for stable oil prices. There are many reasons for the problem and its causes, and our view is that it needs cooperation from all sides in many areas. It's not possible for just one side to provide the solution for this problem," Saudi Arabia's deputy oil minister, Prince Salman bin Abdul-Aziz, told reporters.
Analysts said Saudi Arabia was concerned about high oil prices because despite the cash windfall, they drive up inflation, hurt emerging economies
and force countries to look for alternative fuel sources.
TRANSLATION OF THE ABOVE PARAGRAPH: Saudis fear that as world consumers seek to escape being held hostage by out of control fuel costs, they will eventually REPLACE crude oil with alternate energy sources that will leave the Saudis and other oil producing countries with a product the world no longer needs in large quantities - and at prices they no longer can control.