Saudi Arabia says it’s not responsible for high oil prices after attacks by Houthi rebels

Oil

Dubai: Saudi Arabia said Monday it ‘won’t bear any responsibility for any shortage in oil supplies to global markets’ after attacks by Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels affected the kingdom’s production. The announcement comes as Saudi Arabia remains lockstep with OPEC and other oil-producing countries in a deal limiting increases in production and as energy prices rise higher amid Russia’s war on Ukraine. Already, Americans have had to pay record-breaking prices at the pump for gasoline.

The state-run Saudi Press Agency quoted the Foreign Ministry as saying that ‘the international community must assume its responsibility to maintain energy supplies’ in order to ‘stand against the Houthis’.

The repeated Houthi attacks will affect ‘the kingdom’s production capacity and its ability to meet its obligations’, the statement added, threatening the ‘security and stability of energy supplies to global markets’.

Benchmark Brent crude oil stood at over USD 112 a barrel in trading Monday.

Yemen’s rebels launched Sunday a series of attacks targeting oil and natural gas production in Saudi Arabia.

Also read: Oil prices climb again as US prepares to ban Russian crude

The Saudi Energy Ministry had said the attacks at the Yanbu petrochemicals complex on the Red Sea coast led to a temporary drop in oil output.

The drone and missile strikes ignited a fire at a tank at a petroleum distribution in the Saudi port city of Jiddah and affected production at the gas facility in Yanbu. The overall extent of damage at the installations remained unclear.

The Saudi Arabia government condemned the attacks as posing a threat to the security of oil supplies ‘in these extremely sensitive circumstances’ in the global energy market.

The relentless wave of strikes on Sunday marked one of the most intense Houthi barrages on the kingdom, exposing Saudi defense vulnerabilities and recalling the dramatic September 2019 attacks on two key oil installations that knocked out half of Saudi Arabia’s total oil production.

Exit mobile version