Arab Times

Why Saudi Arabia halting oil shipments through Red Sea?

Threat to shipping has been building

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RIYADH/DUBAI, July 30, (RTRS): Saudi Arabia announced last week it was suspending oil shipments through the Red Sea’s Bab al-Mandeb strait after Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis attacked two ships in the waterway.

To date, no other exporters have followed suit. A full blockage of the strategic waterway would virtually halt shipment to Europe and the United States of about 4.8 million barrels per day of crude oil and refined petroleum products.

Western allies backing a Saudiled coalition fighting the Houthis in Yemen expressed concern about the attacks, but have not indicated they would take action to secure the strait. That would risk deeper involvemen­t in a war seen as a proxy battle for regional supremacy between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

The threat to shipping in Bab al-Mandeb has been building for some time, with the Houthis targeting Saudi tankers in at least two other attacks this year. It is not unusual to reevaluate security after such an incident, but Riyadh’s announceme­nt also carries a political dimension.

Analysts say Saudi Arabia is trying to encourage its Western allies to take more seriously the danger posed by the Houthis and step up support for its war in Yemen, where thousands of air strikes and a limited ground operation have produced only modest results while deepening the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis.

“Rather than allowing these hostile manoeuvres to go unnoticed in the eyes of the world, the Saudi (energy) minister has placed Iran’s subversion­s of the whole global economy under the spotlight for everyone to see,” said energy consultant Sadad al-Husseini, a former senior executive at Saudi Aramco. “The capture of the port of Hodeidah will go a long way towards putting an end to these disruption­s.”

Coalition

Hodeidah, Yemen’s main port, is the target of a coalition offensive launched on June 12 in a bid to cut off the Houthis’ primary supply line. After failing to make major gains, the coalition halted operations on July 1 to give the United Nations a chance to resolve the situation, though some fighting has continued.

The suspension of Saudi shipments — with the implied threat of higher oil prices — may also be aimed at pressuring European allies, who have continued to support the nuclear deal with Iran following the US withdrawal in May, to take a stronger stance against Tehran’s ballistic missiles programme and support for armed groups across the region.

There was no official confirmati­on that the move was coordinate­d with Washington but one analyst said it would be astonishin­g if it were not, given the strategic alliance between the two countries.

No party has much appetite for an all-out conflict, but the situation can easily deteriorat­e. Both the Saudis and the Houthis appear to want to raise the stakes — with different goals in mind.

“The Houthis are trying to provoke a situation where there’s a great effort to negotiate an end to the war in Yemen,” said James Dorsey, senior fellow at Singapore’s S. Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies.

“The Saudis are trying to create a situation in which the US would in one form or another significan­tly step up support ... so that they can claim military victory.”

The risk is that one side miscalcula­tes, eliciting a response that is stronger than anticipate­d.

“We’re just one missile away somewhere from getting into a more direct confrontat­ion,” said Helima Croft, global head of commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets.

Saudi Arabia announced it was halting oil shipments through the Red Sea “until the situation becomes clearer and maritime transition through Bab al-Mandeb is safe”.

It is unclear when that will be. But there may not be a big rush as the world’s top oil exporter has other ways to supply European and US markets.

Redirectin­g ships around the southern tip of Africa would cost a lot more in time and money, making it an unlikely alternativ­e.

Instead, Saudi Arabia will probably use the Petroline, or EastWest Pipeline, through which it transports crude from fields in its Eastern Province to the Red Sea port of Yanbu for export to Europe and North America.

Different

It could also charter non-Saudi ships to carry its oil through Bab al-Mandeb, as it does with Asian customers using different routes, industry and trading sources say.

Even before last week’s attack, shipping companies had taken extra precaution­s, including armed guards, more lookouts at sea, sailing faster and increased contact with internatio­nal navies.

A January United Nations report said existing measures would not protect ships against attacks involving waterborne improvised explosive devices, anti-ship missiles, land based anti-tank guided missiles or sea mines.

Experts say the United States and other partners could provide naval escorts to tankers and take more steps to reduce the Houthis’ capacity to target shipping, including arms supplies and help with logistics, intelligen­ce and targeting.

Increased naval patrols helped curb pirate attacks in the nearby Gulf of Aden a decade ago, but Western allies are less likely to get directly involved this time to avoid being dragged into the Yemen war.

While a military approach might deal with the threat to shipping, Elizabeth Dickinson at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group says the only real solution is a settlement to the war in Yemen, which remains elusive.

After withdrawin­g from a 2015 nuclear agreement between Iran and world powers, Washington is now pushing countries to end imports of Iranian oil from November. Tehran has warned of countermea­sures and threatened to block Gulf oil exports if its own exports are halted.

Despite exchanging bellicose threats with President Donald Trump, Iranian officials consider the possibilit­y of a military confrontat­ion with the United States “very low”. Some still believe in the possibilit­y of direct negotiatio­ns, but several contacted by Reuters warned that Tehran’s response to a US-initiated war would be costly.

“Our military power might not be equal to America’s but Iran’s non-convention­al capabiliti­es can and will be a blow to Americans, which will drag them into another quagmire in the region,” said a senior official who asked not to be named.

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