Now It Is Official - Saudis Dogs Can Go Fuck Themselves
PRINCE ALWALEED:
Fracking Is Going To Crush The Saudi Economy If Nothing Is
Done
Billionaire Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal has warned shale oil
and gas development poses a threat to the kingdom's economy, the
Wall Street Journal's Summer Said reports.
In an open letter to Saudi oil minister Ali al Naimi [in Arabic],
Alwaleed also warns the kingdom must diversify its revenue streams
in the face of flagging oil demand.
A source translated the key portion of the note:
With all due respect to your Highness’ viewpoint about shale gas
and that it poses no danger on Saudi economy at ‘the present
time’, I was hoping that your Highness would also shed light and
focus on the danger of this matter in the ‘not-so-distant future’,
especially that America and some Asian countries made big
discoveries in shale gas extraction which will affect the oil
industry around the world in general and Saudi Arabia in
particular...
He also sent us the following summary of the letter's salient
parts:
The third page calls on the government to decrease its dependence
on oil and start investing in alternative energy sources like
solar.
The fourth page is to the deputy oil minister after he told BBC
that Saudi is not concerned about shale gas at the present time.
Alwaleed says shale gas may not be a concern in the present, but
it should be worrying for the future of Saudi energy exports.
The fifth page is similar to the fourth. His handwritten comment
asks if indeed 92% of Saudi revenue is from oil and that we should
pay more attention and shale gas and other energy developments
around the world.
Here's Sky News' summary:
Prince Alwaleed said demand for oil from Organisation of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) member states was "in
continuous decline".
He said Saudi Arabia's heavy dependence on oil was "a truth that
has really become a source of worry for many.
...
"Our country is facing a threat with the continuation of its
near-complete reliance on oil, especially as 92% of the budget for
this year depends on oil," he said.
"It is necessary to diversify sources of revenue, establish a
clear vision for that and start implementing it immediately."
Naimi recently denied that shale posed a threat, but the prince
challenges that view, Said says:
We disagree with your Excellency on what you said, and we see that
raising North American shale gas production is an inevitable
threat," Prince Alwaleed's letter said, in comments directed at
Mr. Naimi.
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