Page added on June 19, 2008
WITH oil prices nudging $140 a barrel, Saudi Arabia stands to receive a windfall this year of up to $400 billion, double what it earned from selling oil last year. Gloom at the world’s petrol pumps, it may be assumed, can only mean hand-rubbing glee for their biggest supplier. Such is the case with some of the kingdom’s rivals in the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), the cartel that supplies over one-third of the world’s crude. Iran, for instance, has consistently argued against doing anything to bring down prices. Why, then, have the Saudis mounted a risky bid to do just that, by boosting oil output and summoning the world’s top energy officials to an emergency meeting in Jeddah on June 22nd?
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