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No Saudi Oil Says Trump; Saudi Arabia Fires Back

kamrananvaar

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Imagine making the world’s largest oil exporter sweat it out, even before you take office. That’s exactly what Donald Trump is doing.The president-elect has said repeatedly that the U.S. needs to block all oil imports from Saudi Arabia.

During his campaign Trump vowed to secure U.S. energy independence from “our foes and the oil cartels,” while also creating “complete American energy independence.”

However, on Wednesday, Saudi Arabia’s oil minister fired back. Khalid Al-Falih, also the chairman of Aramco, said in an interview that “at his heart President-elect Trump will see the benefits [of Saudi oil imports] and I think the oil industry will also be advising him accordingly that blocking trade in any product is not healthy.”

“The U.S. is sort of the flag-bearer for capitalism and free markets,” Al-Falih added. “The U.S. continues to be a very important part of a global industry that is interconnected, that is dealing with a fungible commodity which is crude oil. So having equalization through free trade is very healthy for oil,” he said.


The Saudi oil minister added that Saudis are waiting for Trump’s presidency, as his presidential campaign had amounted to “50,000 feet announcements” that may change.

Despite the U.S. shale oil boom, which has made it the third largest global crude oil producer, the country still relies heavily on Saudi crude imports. Saudi Arabia is the largest Middle Eastern oil supplier to the U.S. with an 11% market share and has also invested heavily in U.S. downstream assets (refineries) to help lock in that supply. Around 31% of all U.S. oil imports are from OPEC members, while Canadian oil imports have a 41% share.

Saudi Arabia for its part, has been hit particularly by the more than two-year roil in oil markets. As oil prices have tanked from $115/barrel in mid-summer 2014 and are now hovering in the mid $40s range, Saudi Arabia has run record budget deficits of $98 billion last year and $87 billion forecasted for this year. Foreign reserves are also dwindling as the central bank props up the economy.

The downturn in oil prices and lost oil revenue is also forcing Riyadh to put in place politically unpopular austerity measures, as well as raising $17.5 billion in international bond sales last month, with little end in sight until OPEC and major non-OPEC oil producers can agree on a substantive and lasting oil production cut.
 
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Saudi Arabia should look at other sources of income, it is too much dependent on oil:astagh:.
If the petrodollar stops then its game over.
My advice would be to promote tourism in Saudi Arabia.
 
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If Saudi start selling oil in yen then USA is finish as super power mr trump do it please hahahaha
 
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You know a war of west is coming towards Middle East. You will be stupid to keep your head buried in the sand, which by the way is plenty in the middle-east, on the land and in the brain of its leadership.

What is the way out?
  • Welcome new allies like China and Russia.
  • Make peace with Iran and make sure no foreign anti-Muslim camp is able to penetrate your columns.
  • Diversify your earning potentials, oil alone will not save you for another century.
  • Establish a Muslim block by involving all Muslim countries, and by all, I mean ALL.
  • Invest heavily on education, co-develop and co-defend. Why cannot there be a joint research, development forum?
Solution is simple but it demands both Saudi and Iran governments to leave their grudges, hatred and personal agenda aside. Its "Qurb-e-Qyamat", if you are not united, you will be what you currently are - the invaluable dried leaves.
 
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China has huge shale reserve. Plus electric cars are the future. It's only a matter of time before Saudi Arabia's oil revenues plummet.

We will only be able to properly harness our Shale reserves after a few decades.

So for the next few decades our oil imports are going to be growing significantly. Long enough for Russia and Saudi Arabia and Iran to reap the windfall and move away from exporting oil to begin with.
 
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We will only be able to properly harness our Shale reserves after a few decades.

So for the next few decades our oil imports are going to be growing significantly. Long enough for Russia and Saudi Arabia and Iran to reap the windfall and move away from exporting oil to begin with.

The shale oil/gas and green energy are the future that we are moving toward, but the oil cannot be completely replaced within the next decades, so we won't mind if KSA and other gulf nations wanna use our currency settlement for the oil.
 
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Mr Trump will learn his lesson in international trade as soon as Saudis squeeze his balls.
trump is not averse to offshore oil drilling as such coming years will see US oil import slowing down.
 
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Mr Trump will learn his lesson in international trade as soon as Saudis squeeze his balls.


What balls squeezing? Saudi Arabia has no leverage over the US. It's the Saudi prince that sucked up to Trump after he won the presidential election, this after insulting and taunting him when he was running for president.

It's the Saudis that make donations to people like the Clinton crime family for special favors, it's the Saudis that purchase billions in arms from the US. If Trump puts an embargo on the Saudis most of their military aircraft and vehicles will be sitting in storage with no spares. The US does not need Saudi money from weapons, they give away billions in arms or money every year to counties like, Israel, Egypt, Pakistan, ect.


The US is sitting massive gas and oil reserves that it has been trying to preserve under the Democrats. The US does not need anything from Saudi Arabia.
 
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What balls squeezing? Saudi Arabia has no leverage over the US. It's the Saudi prince that sucked up to Trump after he won the presidential election, this after insulting and taunting him when he was running for president.

Actually, the Saudis have significant investment in the US bond market. So, it is not to say that they have absolutely no leverage over the Americans.

It's the Saudis that make donations to people like the Clinton crime family for special favors, it's the Saudis that purchase billions in arms from the US. If Trump puts an embargo on the Saudis most of their military aircraft and vehicles will be sitting in storage with no spares. The US does not need Saudi money from weapons, they give away billions in arms or money every year to counties like, Israel, Egypt, Pakistan, ect.

The middle east overall is a big source of revenue for American weapons manufacturers. The Saudis share a fair chunk of that. Do that, it will lead to job losses which will not be in Trump's favor. And to some extent, the Saudis are forced to buy them.

Egypt and Pakistan doesn't have the kind of money that the Saudis have.

American weapons are only for show.

The US is sitting massive gas and oil reserves that it has been trying to preserve under the Democrats. The US does not need anything from Saudi Arabia.

Well, there's a reason for that. One can import all the oil it needs from overseas while preserving his own resources for the future without worry.

A mix renewable and non-renewable energy is the way for the future before people can fully adopt renewable ones.
 
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