“The Ministry of Energy, Industry and Mineral Resources affirmed today that recently circulated claims that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is threatening to sell its oil in currencies other than the dollar are inaccurate and do not reflect Saudi Arabia’s position on this matter,” a statement from the Saudi Press Agency reads. This is the official state news agency of the Kingdom.
The statement follows reports that
Riyadh was considering switching from the greenback to other currencies in its
oil trade in response to anti-OPEC legislation plans in the U.S. Congress.
Reuters reported last week, citing unnamed sources, that the switch from U.S.
dollars to other currencies had been discussed in senior Saudi circles and that
it had also been shared with U.S. government officials from the energy
department.
The reported threat takes OPEC’s—Saudi
Arabia’s—offensive against the No Oil Producing and Exporting Cartels Act a
step further after last month UAE oil minister, Suhail al-Mazrouei, reportedly
told lenders at the meeting that if the bill was made into law that made OPEC
members liable to U.S. anti-cartel legislation, the group, which is to all
intents and purposes indeed a cartel, would break up and every member would
boost production to its maximum.
According to the SPA statement,
however, “The Kingdom has been trading its oil in dollars for decades which has
served well the objectives of its financial and monetary policies.”
The traditionally close
relationship between Washington and Riyadh began to strain in the wake of the
2014 oil price collapse and the straining intensified after the public outcry
in the West over the killing of Saudi dissident Jamal Khashoggi, a vocal critic
of Crown Prince Mohammed.
Tension flared higher when a group
of U.S. legislators introduced the so-called NOPEC bill seeking to make OPEC
members accountable under U.S. cartel legislation. According to the Reuters
sources, Riyadh kept dropping the dollar for oil trading up its sleeve as “the
nuclear option.”