“$100-120 – I think it’s difficult to reach 120 another time…We
understand that all countries need higher incomes…We want higher
incomes, but we want higher incomes for us and future generations,” Madi
told an energy conference in Riyadh. Brent crude is currently around
$55 per barrel.
He also repeated that Saudi Arabia had no political motives in its oil policy.
“There isn’t any political dimension in what we do at the oil
ministry – our vision is commercial and economic…We didn’t mean to hurt
anybody, our vision is simply the following: the producers which have
low costs have to have the priority to produce, but those who have high
costs have to wait for their turn to produce,” he said.
“We are not against anybody or against the (production of U.S. shale
oil)…On the contrary we welcome it, as it balances the market in the
long run.”
Some producers such as Iran, a diplomatic rival of Saudi Arabia, have
sharply criticised Riyadh for its decision to let oil prices slide
rather than trying to support them with an OPEC production cut.
But Madi said on Sunday that the price drop was because of fundamental supply and demand factors, not any non-economic policies.
“Was OPEC able to control prices? The answer is, if OPEC could have
controlled the prices it would have done so, but it is not in the
interest of OPEC to control the prices.
“It is OPEC’s interest to achieve balance in the market. The price
is decided by the market, and the market is subject to supply and
demand.”
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