The Oklahoman

Saudi Arabia doesn’t want to repeat ’73 oil crisis, officials say

- BY DINA KHRENNIKOV­A

Saudi Arabia has no intention of using its oil wealth as a political tool in the controvers­y over the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, and the kingdom plans to boost crude output again soon, officials said Monday.

“For decades we used our oil policy as a responsibl­e economic tool and isolated it from politics,” Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih said in an interview with Russia’s TASS news agency published on Monday. “So let’s hope that the world would deal with the political crisis, including the one with a Saudi citizen in Turkey, with wisdom.”

Falih’s comments come just days after Saudi Arabia said Khashoggi, a critic of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was killed in the country’s consulate in Istanbul. While the official report won praise from U.S. President Donald Trump, many politician­s and leaders in America and Europe questioned the official explanatio­n that he was accidental­ly killed in an altercatio­n. That contradict­s details leaked by Turkish officials saying the journalist was murdered.

The incident has damaged the kingdom’s image as a future investment hub, with global business leaders from Goldman Sachs to Uber distancing themselves from Prince Mohammed and scrapping plans to attend his business forum this week.

Last week, Saudi Arabia vowed to retaliate against any punitive measures linked to Khashoggi’s fate, fueling concerns of oil price hikes. Al-Falih said there’s no intention of repeating the 1973 oil embargo, in which the kingdom and several regional allies squeezed supplies to the U.S. and Europe in retaliatio­n for their support for Israel.

Saudi Arabia is ready to raise its output to 11 million barrels a day “in the near future” and has the ability to lift production as high as 12 million barrels a day if the market requires it, Al-Falih

said. The world needs to show its appreciati­on of the efforts and multibilli­on dollar Saudi investment that made this possible, he added.

There are limits to the kingdom’s ability to respond, Al-Falih said. If the supply gap created by disruption in Libya, Nigeria, Venezuela — as well as U.S. sanctions against Iran — were to grow as

large as 3 million barrels a day, Saudi Arabia would need to tap its oil reserves, he said.

Joint work between the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and non-OPEC oil producers needs to continue on a long-term basis, Al-Falih said. He expects the cooperatio­n agreement, initially signed in late 2016, to be extended in December, at a meeting in Vienna. The deal “will allow us to intervene to rebalance the market in any appropriat­e time from January onward,” he

said.

After agreeing in late 2016 to cut production to eliminate a supply glut and boost prices, many OPEC members and allies including Russia are now increasing output to offset disruption­s in Venezuela and Iran. It’s still too early to say what strategy the group will adopt in 2019 given current uncertaint­ies, said Al-Falih.

“If the supply is too long, we should be able to cut,” Al-Falih said. “If supply is short, we have to be able to respond.”

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