Just in:
LUX Celebrates A Century Of Unmatched Fragrance With “Still There” Campaign // Crypto Advocacy Groups Challenge SEC Rule // UAE Scrutinizes Report on Racial Discrimination Treaty // Sharjah Census Gears Up for Final Enumeration Phase // Astana International Exchange Connects with Regional Markets Through Tabadul Hub // ESG Achievement Awards 2023/2024 is Open for Application, Celebrating Innovative Sustainable Practices and Responsible Risk Management // Hong Kong Unveils April 30 Launch for Landmark Crypto ETFs // Migrity Business Talent Academy Announces Innovative AI Entrepreneurship // Congress in firefighting mode amid row over Pitroda remarks // Shaping the future crypto trading of compliance, Qmiax has launched a brand-new user interface and trading process // Municipalities Strengthen Ties Through New Secretariat // Empty Promises Haunt DAO Maker Hack Victims After Three Years // Supreme Court asks EC 4 questions on how VVPATs work // Leading the innovation in cryptocurrency trading, Qmiax Exchange has updated its OTC fiat exchange process // VinFast officially signs agreements with 12 new dealers in the US // Brazilian Fintech Giant Nubank Embraces Cryptocurrencies // China Railway Construction Corporation: Breakthroughs in Early 2024 Drive the Railways Modernisation // Leading with Compliance, ZUHYX Earns the Canadian MSB License // Octa crypto snapshot: investors behavior predictions after Bitcoin halving // Crypto Exchange Crypto.com Delays South Korean Launch for Regulatory Discussions //

Saudis to build shipping complex to support oil trade

|By Arabian Post Staff|Saudi Arabia will build a maritime complex on its east coast, with shipbuilding capability, to provide sufficient capacity for exporting oil, Bloomberg reported quoting Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih.

The country, the world’s largest oil-producing nation, eventually will have a shipping fleet that will match its oil capabilities, Al-Falih said in Riyadh. Saudi Arabian Oil Co., or Aramco, will need more tankers to meet global demand, he told reporters.

Oil prices have rebounded more than 70 percent from the 12-year low reached earlier this year as a Saudi Arabian-led OPEC strategy to pressure rivals with lower prices slowly eliminates a surplus in global supply. Al-Falih told the Houston Chronicle newspaper in June that the glut was over, an assessment shared by the International Energy Agency, which said on June 14 that the crude market will be balanced in the second half of 2016.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries expects demand for its oil will rise to about 33 million barrels a day next year, 142,000 a day more than in June, the group said in its monthly report published July 12. Saudi Arabia is producing at close to a record, according to the report. Production outside OPEC is expected to fall by 900,000 barrels a day this year, the largest decline since 1992, according to the IEA.

Crude oil will rise to a range of $50 to $60 a barrel until at least 2018 as demand rises, Kuwait’s acting oil minister Anas Al-Saleh said last week.

Saudi Arabia, along with the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait, is expanding its energy industry, driving investments in the region to $900 billion over the next five years, Apicorp said on April 12.

Arab Petroleum Investment Corp., a multilateral energy-finance lender based in Dammam, Saudi Arabia, and National Shipping Co. of Saudi Arabia plan to buy as many as 15 oil tankers via a new $1.5 billion fund. Apicorp, as the lender is known, will own 85 percent of the fund and National Shipping the rest. Investments will be allocated in $500 million increments, National Shipping said Sunday in a statement to Saudi Arabia’s stock market.

Apicorp plans to issue Islamic bonds to diversify its portfolio, which is mainly in petrochemicals. The lender has set up funds to focus on renewable energy projects and on transportation and shipping.(With Bloomberg)

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT