|
Item of Interest
June 27, 2008
|
Jeddah Energy Meeting:
Charge from King Abdullah
|
|
Editor's
Note:
At
the invitation of King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, government,
business and other leaders from oil consuming and producing
nations and energy sector businesses and organizations met earlier
this week in Jeddah to address the causes of soaring energy prices
and solutions. The delegates heard their host outline the purpose
of the conference in his opening remarks, "Your mission is to
rule out biased rumors and reach the real causes for the increase
in price, determine how to address that development clearly and
transparently, and disclose the outcome to the international
community.." This SUSRIS Item of Interest provides King
Abdullah's complete remarks for your consideration.
We suggest you check the expanded SUSRIS Special Section on the
Energy Crisis which provides a compilation of SUSRIS articles,
related news reports and photographs from the Jeddah conference
and about the troubled global energy markets.
Jeddah
Energy Meeting
King Abdullah Opening Remarks
June 22, 2008
In the name of Allah, most gracious, most merciful, Thanks to
Allah Almighty, peace be upon Prophet Mohammed, his relatives, and
companions. Assalam alaikum wa rahmatullah wa barakatu.
I
would like to welcome and thank you for attending this important
meeting in response to our invitation, and I consider your
attendance reflects your feeling with the responsibility and the
importance of international cooperation in the topic of energy
which concerns all nations of the world, and I wish you every
success.
Our invitation has not come from void. The policy of the Kingdom
of Saudi Arabia since the establishment of OPEC was based on
adopting a fair price for petroleum in a manner that harms neither
the producers nor the consumers.
We were keen on preserving the interests of the entire world as we
are keen on preserving our national interests, and for that policy
we faced many attacks and accepted a lot of harm.
Starting from this policy, we have been allocating a great part of
our income for development assistance. Starting from the same
policy, in the last few months we increased our daily production
of petroleum from nine million barrels to 9,700,000 barrels, and
we are ready to meet any additional requirements in the future.
Brothers and sisters: There are several factors for the recent
quick and unjustified increase of petroleum prices. They include
the frivolity of the speculators in the market for selfish
interests, an increase of consumption in a number of rising
economies, and increasing taxes on petroleum in a number of
consuming countries.
Despite these factors, despite the fact that OPEC has not issued a
decision on pricing for many decades and has left the issue of
price to the market, and despite its keenness on meeting
increasing demand, we find some people accusing OPEC alone.
In the light of this, your great mission becomes clear: Uncovering
the truth. Your mission is to rule out biased rumors and reach the
real causes for the increase in price, determine how to address
that development clearly and transparently, and disclose the
outcome to the international community so that the innocent will
not be treated as a wrongdoer. Only then the truth will survive.
Brothers and sisters:
The Kingdom realizes its historical role in the field of energy,
the importance of international cooperation in the energy affairs,
and the necessity of assisting the poor nations in these difficult
circumstances when they are suffering from the hike in prices of
all commodities, and food commodities in particular. I am pleased
to announce the following in the name of the Kingdom:
First, I call for the launch of an energy initiative for
impoverished countries with the aim of enabling them to confront
the increasing cost of energy. I urge the World
Bank to organize a meeting as soon as possible for donor
countries as well as regional and international financial
institutions to discuss and act on this initiative.
Second: I call upon the Ministerial Council of OPEC
Fund for International Development to meet and consider the
approval of a program parallel to the previous one with continual
characteristic, and I propose an allocation of US $1 billion for
this program.
Third: I announce the readiness of the Kingdom to contribute to
financing the two abovementioned programs within a framework to be
agreed upon.
Fourth: I announce the allocation of US $500 million for soft
loans through the Saudi Fund for
Development for financing projects to help developing
countries to obtain needed energy and development projects.
Fifth: I ask your meeting to form a working group of countries and
organizations which participated in this meeting under the
umbrella of the General Secretariat of the International
Energy Forum. The working group shall follow up and implement
recommendations to be issued by this conference in addition to
monitoring developments in the oil market. I announce the
Kingdom’s readiness to support the working group so that it can
carry out its mission successfully.
Dear Brothers and Sisters:
In this critical hour, the international community must rise to
the level of responsibility. Cooperation must be the cornerstone
of any effort, and we all must have a comprehensive, profound and
humanitarian vision in our perspective of the present and future.
Such a vision shall be liberated from selfishness and shall
transcend to horizons of fraternity and solidarity and this is the
secret of success.
Wa salam alaikum wa rahmat Allah wa barakatu.
Source: SaudiEmbassy.net
Related
Items:
-
SUSRIS
Special Section - Energy Crisis 2008
-
Jeddah
Energy Meeting - Joint Statement - SUSRIS IOI - Jun 27, 2008
-
Jeddah
Energy Meeting: The Saudi Perspective - SUSRIS IOI - Jun 27,
2008
-
Jeddah
Energy Meeting: Charge from King Abdullah - SUSRIS IOI - Jun
27, 2008
-
Oil
Consumers and Producers Set to Meet in Saudi Arabia - SUSRIS
Special Report - Jun 21, 2008
-
Saudi
Plan to Raise Oil Output to 12.5 MBPD - Faiz Al-Mazroui -
SUSRIS IOI - Jun 19, 2008
-
Editorial:
Rise in oil price: Fact and fiction - Arab News - SUSRIS IOI -
Jun 18, 2008
-
The
2008 Energy Crisis: Kingdom Calls for Producers and Consumers
to Talk - SUSRIS Special Report - Jun 9, 2008
-
U.S.-Saudi
Energy Dialogue - Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman - SUSRIS IOI
- May 4, 2006
-
Joint
Oil Data Initiative
-
Inauguration
of the International Energy Forum Secretariat - SUSRIS IOI -
Nov 21, 2005
-
The
Riyadh Declaration - Opec's 3rd Summit - SUSRIS IOI - Nov 18,
2007
-
US
Foreign Policy, Petroleum And The Middle East - Robert E. Ebel
- SUSRIS IOI - Nov 1, 2005
-
SUSRIS
Special Section - President Bush's Visit to Saudi Arabia -
June 2008
-
SUSRIS
Special Section - President Bush's Visit to Saudi Arabia - May
2008
-
Oil's
surge - Brad Bourland - SUSRIS IOI - May 9, 2008
-
Saudis
slightly boost oil output as Bush visits - SUSRIS Special
Report - May 17, 2005
-
Iran,
Oil, and the Strait of Hormuz - Anthony H. Cordesman - SUSRIS
IOI - Mar 27, 2007
-
Saudi
Officials Seek to Temper the Price of Oil - SUSRIS IOI - Jan
29, 2007
-
State
of the Oil and Gas Industry - Saudi Aramco CEO Abdallah Jum'ah
- SUSRIS IOI - Jun 13, 2006
-
Challenges
Facing a National Oil Company in a Global Economy - Khalid A.
Al-Falih -Senior VP - Saudi Aramco - SUSRIS Speeches Library
-
Terrorist
Attack at Abqaiq Oil Facility Thwarted - SUSRIS NID - Feb 25,
2006
-
The
Outlook For The World Oil Market - SUSRIS IOI - Dec 19, 2004
-
Saudi
Arabia: Economic, Oil And Mineral Restructuring And Reforms -
Ali Naimi - SUSRIS IOI - Dec 6, 2004
-
Saudi
Arabia Ready to Boost Crude Oil Output - Kingdom holds last
OPEC spare capacity - SUSRIS NID - Aug 19, 2004
-
Homemade
Oil Crisis - SUSRIS IOI - Jun 11, 2004
-
Future
of Global Oil Supply: Saudi Arabia - SUSRIS Special Section -
Feb 2004
-
Saudi
Arabian Oil Fields Brimming - SUSRIS IOI - Aug 25, 2004
U.S.-Saudi
Relations and Global Energy Security Conference (2004)
-
Part
1 - Ali Al-Naimi, Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources
-
Part
2 - Kyle McSlarrow, Deputy Secretary of Energy, U.S. Energy
Department
-
Part
3 - Guy Caruso, Administrator, Energy Information
Administration
-
Part
4 - Abdallah S. Ju'mah, President and CEO of Saudi Aramco
-
Part
5 - Rex W. Tillerson, President, Exxon Mobil Corporation
-
Part
6 - Ibrahim Al-Assaf, Minister of Finance
-
Part
7 - James Wolfensohn, President, The World Bank
-
Special
Energy Supplement: The New Geopolitics of Oil - SUSRIS IOI -
Jan 6, 2004
|
| |
|
|