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Economy
OPEC’s talks with non-cartel oil producers to give no results
2016-01-30
Sweet, sweet schadenfreude...
The talks of OPEC with non-cartel oil producers won’t give any results, said Nikolai Ivanov, head of the energy markets sector at Russian Institute for Energy and Finance, speaking to Trend Jan. 28.

This week, OPEC urged non-cartel countries to jointly solve the problem of oil excess on the market. On Jan. 28, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said that in February, OPEC plans to hold a meeting with participation of the non-cartel oil producing countries, and Russia is ready to participate in it.

“OPEC is in fact on its last legs,” Ivanov asserted. “Saudi Arabia is taking steps that other countries perceive as unfriendly. There are very strong contradictions within the OPEC itself.”

The expert reminded that most of OPEC countries are not pleased with the current low oil price. He added that Nigeria, Algeria, Angola, Venezuela are among them.

"In particular, Arab countries do not suffer,” he said. “The Arabs are able to reduce the price upon the long-term contracts."

Ivanov also said that currently OPEC must somehow save reputation and pretend that it is somehow trying to act in the common interests of the organization’s members.

"Their actions are unlikely to result in anything,” he said. “But it is necessary to imitate some activity. It is necessary to negotiate, meet in Vienna and make statements."

Ivanov added that OPEC Secretary General Abdalla Salem El-Badri’s initiative to negotiate with different oil producers contradicts to OPEC’s previous actions.

Saudi Oil Minister Ali Al-Naimi said earlier that only efficient producers should stay in the market, Ivanov recalled, saying that in other words, Saudi Arabia didn’t want to subsidize inefficient producers within OPEC.

“The Saudis didn’t want to share their part in the market and told about it directly. After Saudi Arabia has showed its true intentions, it is unlikely that anyone would believe it,” said Ivanov.

In addition, the majority of traditional fields in the world do not allow reducing oil production smoothly, according to him. For example, he said, if the production is cut in Russia, the specifics of the old Siberian fields won’t allow increasing the output later.

“Therefore, the negotiations between Russia and OPEC are absolutely meaningless,” said Ivanov.
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Arabia
Saudi Defense Minister Threatens to Occupy Kuwait
2015-08-04
[ALMANAR.LB] Saudi Defense Minister Mohammad bin Salman threatened to launch war on Kuwait after differences between the two Persian Gulf Arab states escalated over Khafji oilfield.

"Mohammad bin Salman threatened that his country would attack and occupy Kuwait, claiming that not only Khafji oilfield but also entire Kuwait is part of the Saudi territories based on historical documents," Middle-East Panorama quoted on Sunday intelligence sources of the Persian Gulf Arab littoral states as saying.

Kuwait has complained that the continued shut down of Khafji oilfield it shares with Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face...
will incur huge losses Riyadh must compensate for in the future.

Kuwaiti Oil Minister Ali Al Omair in a letter to his Saudi counterpart Ali Al Naimi urged him "to take adequate measures to resume production at Khafji.

By keeping production and exports shut, Kuwait will incur huge losses which will be borne by the Saudi government for violation of the (50-year old) agreement and the 2010 operations agreement".

The sources referred to Salman's harsh reaction to Kuwait's claims, and quoted him as saying that "we saved Kuwait from Saddam's claws and now who is there to free it from our claws".

"Kuwait has no superiority over us and is a country stretched over a piece of land one-fourth of Riyadh," he added, according to the sources.

The field has been shut since October last year for non-compliance with new Saudi environmental standards. It is operated by Al-Khafji Joint Operations Co (KJO), a joint venture between AGOC, a subsidiary of state oil firm Saudi Aramco, and Kuwait Gulf Oil Co (KGOC).
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Arabia
Islamist Saudi Aramco board reshuffled. Richest men in the world never listed on Forbes
2015-05-02
MORDOR JEDDAH: Arab News, Friday 1 May 2015

The Kingdom has approved the restructuring of Saudi Aramco, a move that will see it separated from the Petroleum Ministry.

The Kingdom's Supreme Economic Council approved the restructuring plan that had been proposed by Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, second deputy prime minister and minister of defense.

The king also appointed Khaled Al-Falih as chairman of Saudi Aramco and health minister.

Amin Al-Nasser, Saudi Aramco senior vice-president, has been named acting president and CEO of the oil giant to succeed Al-Falih.

Al-Nasser joined Saudi Aramco in 1982 with a degree in petroleum engineering and has been senior vice-president for upstream operations at Saudi Aramco since 2008.

Other members of the new Aramco council include Petroleum and Mineral Resources Minister Ali Al-Naimi, Finance Minister Ibrahim Al-Assaf, Economy Minister Adel Fakeih, Water and Electricity Minister Abdullah Al-Husayen and Aramco's Al-Falih, according to a copy of a royal decree seen by Reuters.

Saudi Aramco is a world leader in crude exports. It is involved in hydrocarbons exploration, production, refining, distribution, shipping and marketing.

According to the company's website, Aramco has stewardship of natural gas reserves of 288.4 trillion standard cubic feet (scf) and as of 2014 operates 212 oil rigs.
They've been running this gig for decades. You never see them in Forbes on the rich list but they are the richest people in the world. All that money goes in one way or another to spread and entrench our favourite religion (plus a few sex slaves, high class prostitutes, palaces, private islands and gold limos). They are sympathisers. They let the Islamofascists grow and metastasize like koranic cancer in their desert kingdom. I hope the NSA stops persecuting Snowden and starts chasing these guys instead. Ram the Christmas tree they've been looking to sit on up their collective behinds. I've even bolded the names so you can make your Christmas list and raid the swiss banks
Saudi Aramco's board of directors recently held its annual spring meeting in Seoul, South Korea.

An Aramco statement said the meeting's "varied and rich agenda" also included a briefing from Ali Al-Naimi, minister of petroleum and mineral resources, on the recent dissolution of the Supreme Council for Petroleum and Mineral Affairs and the creation of the Supreme Council of the Saudi Aramco. As provided for in the company's Articles of Incorporation, the council was constituted with 10 members, including five members of the board. The council is chaired by Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

On the organizational side, the board made six vice-president appointments including Abdulaziz A. Al-Abdulkarim, Ibraheem M. Assa'adan, Nabeel A. Al-Jama', Nabeel A. Al-Mansour, Nasser A. Al-Nafisee, and Muhammad M. Al Saggaf.

Additionally, general management appointments included Salah M. Al-Hareky, Fuad A. Al-Hazmi, and John Stuart Lilly.
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Arabia
Saudi Arabia's Solution to Global Oil Glut: Pump Ever More Crude
2015-04-24
Hat tip: gCaptain
Saudi Arabia has a response to the global surplus of oil: Raise output to near-record levels and then pump even more.

The world's biggest oil exporter, having abandoned last year its role of keeping global markets in balance, now has incentive to maximize output and undermine rival producers by using its reserve capacity, according to Citigroup Inc. and UBS AG. Just meeting its own domestic demand this summer will require a lot more fuel, others estimate.

The increase ‐ a snub to fellow OPEC members calling on the kingdom to cut production ‐ will heighten tensions when the organization meets in June. Oil plunged to a six-year low near $45 a barrel in January, six weeks after the Saudis overcame opposition within the group to keep up output despite surging U.S. shale supplies.

"Increasing production and exports is the clear implication of Saudi's new oil policy," Seth Kleinman, head of European energy research at Citigroup in London, said by e-mail. "If you want to pressure high cost producers, why hold oil back on spare capacity? Use it all and use it now."

Output Surge

The biggest member in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries boosted output to 10.1 million barrels a day in March, close to an all-time peak, the International Energy Agency reported on April 15. Saudi Oil Minister Ali Al-Naimi, who has stressed that his country won't cede market share to higher-cost producers, said in the capital Riyadh on April 7 that production was at 10.3 million barrels and would remain close to that.

The output decision was "forced upon them" by the runaway growth of U.S. shale, which threatened to erode their market share, Yusuf Alireza, chief executive officer of commodity trader Noble Group Ltd., said at a conference in Lausanne, Switzerland, on April 21.

Saudi Arabia's crude exports slumped to a three-year low of 7.11 million barrels a day last year amid reduced U.S. imports, according to information the nation provided to the Joint Organisations Data Initiative.

Refusing to cut has already been effective in slowing growth in U.S. shale, Tony Hayward, chief executive officer of Genel Energy Plc, said at the Lausanne conference. The IEA, the Paris-based adviser to 29 developed economies, forecasts that non-OPEC supplies, led by the U.S., will expand by only 630,000 barrels a day in 2015, down from a projection of 1.3 million a day in November.

Refinery Expansion

The outlook for demand suggests the Saudis will keep production at "elevated levels," said Miswin Mahesh, an analyst at Barclays Plc in London. Domestic oil consumption rises in the summer months as air conditioning use climbs, and supplies also will be needed for two new refineries, Mahesh said. Summer demand may require output of 11 million barrels a day, London-based consultant Energy Aspects Ltd. said in an April 13 report.

"The implication of the 'use it all and use it now' strategy is that they will continue to ramp up production to 11 and possibly beyond," said Kleinman of Citigroup.

The extra crude won't necessarily weaken oil prices because it will be consumed locally rather than shipped abroad, said Harry Tchilinguirian, head of commodity markets strategy at BNP Paribas SA in London. Price increases for Asian customers indicate the country isn't trying to push supplies onto consumers or capture market share, he said.

OPEC Pleas

"Oil exports to the market may not necessarily move higher," said Tchilinguirian. "We don't think there's a discretionary push to expand market share to the detriment of other OPEC producers."

Fellow OPEC members keep calling on Saudi Arabia to reverse course and curtail supplies. The organization's 12 members will next meet in Vienna on June 5.

OPEC should trim "at least 5 percent" from its output target of 30 million barrels a day, Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said on April 14. Venezuelan Oil Minister Asdrubal Chavez, whose predecessor Rafael Ramirez tried to broker a production cut between OPEC and non-members, visited Saudi Arabia this week.

Iran, suffering from both the collapse in crude prices and international sanctions on its exports, needs an oil price roughly double current levels to cover government spending this year, the International Monetary Fund estimates. Brent crude futures lost 30 cents to $64.55 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange at 11:52 a.m. Singapore time Friday. The contract has lost 44 percent since June.

Tapping Capacity

The organization is likely to persist with its current course, Genel's Hayward said. With no group accord to restrain output, Saudi Arabia will choose to tap its spare capacity, according to UBS. The kingdom has about 2.2 million barrels a day in reserve, the IEA estimates.

"Saudi Arabia will go from record to record," Giovanni Staunovo, an analyst at UBS, said by e-mail from Zurich. "Considering that OPEC isn't balancing the market any more, why should they hold an unutilized spare capacity, rather than use it and make money with it?"
Keeping prices down by pumping more can stick it to the MMs of Iran.
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Economy
Oil drops as Saudi Arabia seeks to calm markets
2012-03-21
NEW YORK: Oil dropped nearly 2 percent as Saudi Arabia sought to knock back the price rise that has threatened the global economy, with the oil minister offering the most detailed argument to date that OPEC nation was prepared to meet any supply shortfalls.

Brent crude settled at $124.12 a barrel, down $1.59 on the day and off earlier lows of $123.20. US crude fell $2.48 to settle at $105.61 a barrel.

Prices dropped after the Kingdom sought to soothe fears about high oil prices, saying that world supplies were well in excess of demand and that $125-a-barrel crude prices were not justified given the anemic state of the world economy.

Petroleum and Mineral Resources Minister Ali Al-Naimi said the Kingdom had satisfied all of its customers' requests for oil and stood ready to raise output to full capacity of 12.5 million barrels per day (bpd), if needed.

"I want to assure you that there is no shortage of supply in the market," Al-Naimi told reporters at a press briefing in Doha, Qatar. "We are ready and willing to put more oil on the market, but you need a buyer."

Oil is trading above $123, just $24 short of an all-time high, as tighter Western sanctions on Iran threaten to slow the country's exports.

"Oil prices today are unjustifiable on a supply and demand basis," said Al-Naimi. "We really don't understand why the prices are behaving the way they are."
Sure you do, you just can't say it out loud...
He said supply of oil was now out-pacing demand by more than 1 million bpd and that customers were not asking for extra crude.

"From our point of view, we have had no customer not satisfied. We have satisfied every request for every customer that has come asking," said Naimi.

"We ask the customers, 'Do you need more?' and invariably the answer is 'No thank you.'"

Riyadh is now pumping 9.9 million bpd — the highest in decades — and is willing to produce at full capacity of 12.5 million bpd immediately, should demand warrant, Al-Naimi said. He said he expected output next month to stay at 9.9 million bpd. Saudi spare production capacity now stands at 2.5 million bpd, he said.

"We spent a lot of money building that capacity. We finished building it in 2009, and it is there to be used," said Al-Naimi.

Storage inside the kingdom was full and Riyadh was holding about 10 million barrels outside of Saudi Arabia in Rotterdam, Sidi Kerir and Okinawa, he said. "Our inventories both in Saudi Arabia and worldwide are full."
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran warns Gulf Arabs on oil
2012-01-16
CAIRO -- Iran warned Gulf Arab oil producers against boosting production to offset any potential drop in Tehran's crude exports in the event of an embargo affecting its oil sales, the latest salvo in the dispute between the West and the Islamic Republic over its nuclear program.
They have to say that to fight back against the sanctions, but going directly after the Gulf States would bring them instant problems...
Mohammad Ali Khatibi, Iran's OPEC governor, was quoted Sunday by the pro-reform Shargh newspaper as saying that attempts by Gulf nations to replace Iran's output with their own would make them an "accomplice in further events."

"These acts will not be considered friendly," Khatibi said, adding that if the Arab producers "apply prudence and announce that they will not participate in replacing oil, then adventurist countries will not show interest," in the embargo.

Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil producer and a close U.S. ally, had said that it was ready to raise its output to accommodate global market needs. The country is the only member of the 12-nation Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries that has significant spare capacity, currently estimated at roughly more than 2 million barrels per day.

With concerns building amid the standoff between Iran and the West over Tehran's nuclear program, a string of Asian and Western officials have visited Saudi Arabia over the past week. While offering assurances that it could meet a shortfall in supply through its spare capacity, Saudi officials have also been careful to say that it was an internal matter if nations chose to abide by any sanctions.

Oil Minister Ali Al-Naimi appeared to try to further clarify the country's position in comments published Sunday in the daily Al-Ektisadiyah newspaper. "We never said that Saudi Arabia is trying to compensate for Iranian oil in the case that sanctions (are enacted)," Al-Naimi was quoted as saying. "We said that we are prepared to meet the increase in global demand as a result of any circumstances."

The kingdom has a production capacity of 12.5 million barrels and is believed to be producing slightly over 9 million to 9.5 million barrels per day.
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Arabia
Kingdom says oil market is oversupplied
2011-04-19
[Arab News] Soddy Arabia's Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources Ali Al-Naimi said on Sunday the world oil market was oversupplied and the Kingdom had reduced output, sending a the strongest signal yet that OPEC may not boost output in June to quell soaring oil prices.

Consumers have urged the exporters' group to add supply to halt the rally in oil prices that has taken crude to its highest level in 2 1/2 years amid unrest in North Africa and the Middle East, but OPEC members say there is little they can do to bring prices down.

"The market is overbalanced ... Our production in February was 9.125 million barrels per day (bpd), in March it was 8.292 million bpd. In April we don't know yet, probably a little higher than March. The reason I gave you these numbers is to show you that the market is oversupplied," Al-Naimi told news hounds.

Two Saudi-based industry sources told Rooters last week the kingdom had cut production.

Al-Naimi's words, echoed later on Sunday by his counterpart from the United Arab Emirates, are the clearest indications yet that the group is unconvinced there is a need for more oil despite the civil war that has slashed Libyan output and expectations Japanese oil demand will rise as it scrambles to rebuild its earthquake-shattered electricity grid.

"These statements underscore the breadth of the security premium currently in (oil) prices. Overall supplies are sufficient," said John Kilduff of energy hedge fund Again Capital. "As we've seen in the past, however, a well-supplied market is not always a barrier to very high prices."

Al-Naimi declined to comment on the current price of crude.

Oil prices fell early last week after Goldman Sachs warned high prices may be eroding demand, but rebounded on signs of renewed health in the US economy on Friday.
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Arabia
Oil price jump not due to shortage: Al-Naimi
2011-03-10
[Arab News] World oil prices slid Tuesday as Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources Ali Al-Naimi said the amount of crude available on the world market was "very adequate" amid fears the Libya crisis could cause a supply shortage.

Al-Naimi reiterated Saudi commitment to meet excess demand in the world oil market but refuted suggestions that the present surge in oil prices reflected a shortage of crude in the market.

"The Kingdom of Soddy Arabia has long been committed to promoting market stability in the interest of both producers and consumers, and in support of global economic growth and development," Al-Naimi told the Saudi Press Agency.

He said the world oil markets have been sufficiently supplied. "Soddy Arabia has an excess capacity of 3.5 million barrels a day which could help compensate any shortages. The Kingdom has access to a large number of oil storage facilities around the world," he said.

"Soddy Arabia's systemic global role is obvious and instrumental in averting supply disruptions in the physical market and keeping the global economic recovery intact. Soddy Arabia's ability to maintain around 70 percent of the world's extra capacity is reassuring to global markets," John Sfakianakis, chief economist at Banque Saudi Fransi, Riyadh, told Arab News.

"Speculators and punters as well as analysts who find it opportune now to call for oil price spikes are exaggerated and unjustified. Those who make such calls are often taking prior market positions damaging the global economy in many ways. Measures have to be taken now to contain such punters," Sfakianakis added.

Brent crude futures for April delivery fell $1.94 at $113.10 a barrel by 12:37 p.m. EST (1737 GMT), having fallen as low as $112.13. US crude futures for April delivery fell 55 cents to $104.89 a barrel, after posting a low of $103.33.

Brent's premium to the US benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude fell $1.44 to $8.34 a barrel, down from a peak of more than $17 last week. On Feb. 24 Brent hit $119.79, the highest since 2008, when it reached an all-time high of $147.50.

OPEC has yet to officially change its production policy, even though it has been boosting supply informally for months. OPEC members often adjust output informally in response to changes in demand and prices without the need for a meeting, Rooters said. Soddy Arabia sometimes steps in unilaterally to meet shortages or when it feels prices have risen to levels that may threaten economic growth or oil demand.
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Arabia
Saudis say world has enough oil as Libya in ferment
2011-02-22
[Arab News] World markets have plenty of oil, the Kingdom said on Monday, as a wave of revolution that has already toppled two presidents tightened its grip on OPEC member Libya and drove prices to a 2-1/2 year-high.

Energy ministers arrived in Riyadh on the eve of talks designed to narrow the gap between producer and consumer nations.

The formal agenda could be overwhelmed by concern anti-government protests will drive oil prices still higher.

Oil on Monday climbed above $106 as energy firms recalled international staff from Libya and spreading unrest shut down some 100,000 barrels per day (bpd) of production there.

It was the first output disruption since popular unrest erupted in Tunisia, ousting its president, before spreading to Egypt, where it unseated Hosni Mubarak after 30 years of rule.

Libyan leader Muammar Qadaffy's four-decade-rule also appeared in jeopardy as protests reached the capital Tripoli for the first time.

Saudi Oil Minister Ali Al-Naimi will open proceedings at the International Energy Forum with a speech on Tuesday, but declined to comment to news hounds on Monday.

His deputy, Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman Al-Saud, told a news conference on Monday the market had plenty of oil.

"We're much more focused on how the market balance is, is it sufficiently supplied? And the answer is 'yes, abundantly,' therefore does the situation warrant any kind of intervention? I don't think so," he said.

He also reiterated the long-held Saudi view $70-$80 was the fair price for oil.

"It is justified because it enables producers to invest, it is justified because it does not harm consumers."

Even though oil prices are well above those levels, OPEC ministers have repeatedly said the market has enough supply and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has no plans to meet formally to reassess output until June.
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International-UN-NGOs
Hints of a rift at OPEC about production
2008-05-10
A member of OPEC signaled for the first time in months that the oil cartel might increase its output if prices keep rising, even as oil hit another record on Friday. The comments from Libya's senior oil official, Shukri Ghanem, suggested a possible rift among OPEC members. Since the cartel's last meeting in March, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries has argued that the market was not lacking in oil supplies and blamed speculators for driving up prices.

In recent weeks, prices have come under renewed pressure because of a string of export disruptions from Nigeria. Crude oil for June delivery rose $2.32, or 1.9 percent, to $126.01 a barrel in New York trading on Friday. Prices have been above $100 since early February.

Since they last increased oil supplies in September, members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries have abdicated most of their responsibilities toward the market, arguing that the higher prices had more to do with investment flows than with supply and demand. The problem for OPEC is that prices have become largely unhinged from real market factors. As the dollar declines and the economy slows, investment funds have moved into commodities like oil or gold, which they consider safer and more profitable than stocks.

But the political cost of rising energy prices, especially in the United States, which is in the midst of a presidential election, is making OPEC's position increasingly delicate. Economic growth in the United States has slowed and gasoline demand is set to fall this year for the first time since 1991.

At a meeting of oil producers and suppliers in Rome last month, many OPEC delegates, including the Saudi Arabian oil minister, Ali Al-Naimi, said there were not enough buyers to justify an increase in production. But some producers are becoming increasingly uneasy about the run-away prices and are finding it difficult to maintain OPEC's position.

"They are playing with fire," an analyst at Lehman Brothers, Adam Robinson, said. "Every time the price goes up, and we break a new psychological mark, they risk killing the goose that lays the golden egg. Their biggest fear is triggering something they can't control."

The group, which accounts for 40 percent of the world's oil exports, is not scheduled to meet until September. At its March gathering, OPEC ignored calls from President George W. Bush and other industrialized leaders to bolster production, opting instead to keep output steady.

"We would consider among other options the possibility of increasing output as a way to ensure market stability," Ghanem, the Libyan official, was quoted by Bloomberg News as saying Friday. "I expect a meeting before September. I am not calling for one, but I would support one."

Another OPEC delegate, quoted by Reuters on Friday, also raised the prospect of an OPEC consultation to increase production before the September meeting.

But there is no suggestion that the cartel will meet soon. On Thursday, the organization's secretary-general, Abdalla Salem El-Badri, issued a statement from the group's headquarters in Vienna, saying there was "clearly no shortage" of oil in the market. "In recent month, oil prices have become increasingly volatile, mainly driven by financial market developments and the increased flow of speculative funds into oil futures," the statement said.

But he seemed to leave the door for OPEC. "The organization stands ready to act if the market shows a need for any further measures," he said.
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Arabia
Saudi oil policy
2008-04-14
Opec held production steady at meetings in February and March despite calls for more oil from the US and other consumers. Opec officials blame the high price on factors beyond the group's control such as the weak dollar, investment flows into commodities and speculation. Saudi Oil Minister Ali Al Naimi said last week that global oil markets were well supplied and there was no need to put more oil on the market, despite prices hitting a record of over $112 a barrel last week.

Saudi Arabia has trimmed its output to around 9 million bpd to reflect lower customer demand, a Saudi oil source said on Friday. The kingdom had in previous months pumped around 9.2 million bpd. Crude demand traditionally dips at this time of year after the end of winter as refiners carry out maintenance and prepare to meet summer demand.

Saudi production capacity stands at around 11.3 million bpd, and is scheduled to rise to 12. 5 million bpd next year. (Reuters)

Do the Sauidis want to see Obama win? Or
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Arabia
All Saudi ministers retain portfolios in new cabinet
2007-03-24
Bottom news story of the day...
Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah on Thursday re-appointed his Cabinet, with all ministers including Oil Minister Ali Al Naimi keeping their posts despite speculation of major changes, Saudi media reported. "The Cabinet has been reformed with all current ministers continuing in their posts," said the royal decree, which set time periods for some other official appointments. Saudi rulers have set a pattern of announcing new Cabinets every four years at the onset of the third month of the Islamic calendar and a reshuffle was expected this week.
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