US to send envoy to Saudi Arabia amid oil price crash

US to send envoy to Saudi Arabia amid oil price crash
Trump administration officials still believe in Saudi Arabia's role as a ''force for stability in global oil markets'', as prices plummet to historic lows.
2 min read
21 March, 2020
Crude prices plummeted to a near 20-year low this week [Getty]
US President Donald Trump will send a senior energy envoy to Saudi Arabia, according to officials on Friday, to stabilise energy markets reeling from the impact of the coronavirus-caused global economic crash.

Oil prices have been slashed in half in the last two weeks amid an ongoing price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia compounded by the Covid-19 pandemic, which has sent demand into a nosedive.

Saudi Arabia and Russia were locked in collision course after their three-year deal to restrain oil production collapsed this month.

The kingdom vowed to boost output to a record 12.3 million barrels per day, and has chartered numerous tankers to ship oil around the globe. 

Saudi Arabia's fight for global oil market at a time of oversupply and demand strain has caused crude prices to plummet to near 20-year lows this week.

According to US officials who spoke to Reuters on a condition of anonymity, a senior Energy Department representative will be sent to Riyadh for several months to work alongside State Department officials and the existing energy attache.

While the Trump administration holds onto its faith in kingdom role as steadfast leader of stability in the global oil market, 13 Republican senators sent a letter to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Monday, urging him to reverse his decision to increase oil production.

"Senior Saudi government leaders have repeatedly told American officials, including us, that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is a force for stability in global markets. Recent Saudi actions have called this role into question," the letter read.

Trump administration officials will continue to reduce global oil output with sanctions on what the officials called "bad actors" in Iran and Venezuela, both of which are OPEC members, and their shipping networks, the officials who spoke to Reuters said.

Read more: Saudi Arabia suffers from plummeting oil prices, as US Republicans chafe MbS over production gamble

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