An undated picture shows a view of the al-Zour oil and gas installations, in the south of the Gulf state of Kuwait. - Russia's assault on Ukraine is reverberating in the energy-rich Gulf, where top oil and gas producers face economic and political dilemmas in easing sky-high prices and alleviating shortages in Europe. As oil prices broke past $100 per barrel and risks of supply disruptions grew, eyes in Europe were increasingly focusing on oil kingpin Saudi Arabia, and Qatar, one of the biggest natural gas exporters. (Photo by AFP) (Photo by -/AFP via Getty Images)
Home / News / Oil And Gas Investment Key To Boost Energy Security During Conflicts- S/Arabia

Oil And Gas Investment Key To Boost Energy Security During Conflicts- S/Arabia

Saudi Arabia has highlighted the importance of oil and gas especially when conflicts seizes investment opportunities. The statement indirectly challenges producing countries to proactively develop their energy resources to stand the chance to sustain energy supply during such occurrences. The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Aramco, Amin Nasser, Saudi Arabia’s oil giant dropped this hint warning that experience had shown that new energy sources don’t replace the old, but added to the mix.

 

He said the transition to net-zero emissions could cost up to $200 trillion, and renewable sources were not meeting current demand. Nassir, said the importance of oil and gas can’t be underestimated at times when conflicts occur, something that was currently being seen, when he spoke during an energy conference on Monday. Nasser delivered his speech to the Energy Asia Conference in Kuala Lumpur by a video link.

 

Oil prices jumped last week after Israel launched strikes against Iran on Friday that it said were to prevent Tehran from building an atomic weapon. The fighting intensified over the weekend. “History has shown us that when conflicts occur, the importance of oil and gas can’t be understated,” Nasser said. “We are witnessing this in real time, with threats to energy security continuing to cause global concern,” he said, without directly mentioning the fighting between Israel and Iran.

 

Nasser also said that experience had shown that new energy sources don’t replace the old, but added to the mix. He said the transition to net-zero emissions could cost up to $200 trillion, and renewable sources were not meeting current demand. “As a result, energy security and affordability have at last joined sustainability as the transition’s central goals,” he said. Aramco is the economic backbone of Saudi Arabia, generating a bulk of the kingdom’s revenue through oil exports and funding its ambitious Vision 2030 diversification drive.