Saudi Arabia’s juggling act between demands
The kingdom is poised to play a key role in shaping this year’s oil market, but it must maintain a delicate balance between global and domestic demands
The bout of sabre-rattling across the Strait of Hormuz is proving an unlikely source of empowerment for Saudi Arabian policymakers. Having come to the rescue of the world’s oil market last year, helping compensate for the loss of about 1.6 million barrels a day (b/d) of Libyan production, the threat of an embargo on Iranian oil and the Tehran government’s counter-threat to choke oil shipments from the Mideast Gulf has again foisted the role of global saviour on the kingdom. It is a mantle that the Saudi’s appear more than willing to adopt. Despite oil output exceeding 10 million b/d in recent months, the highest for 30 years, Saudi leaders say there is significantly more in the tank, should
Also in this section
23 January 2026
A strategic pivot away from Russian crude in recent weeks tees up the possibility of improved US-India trade relations
23 January 2026
The signing of a deal with a TotalEnergies-led consortium to explore for gas in a block adjoining Israel’s maritime area may breathe new life into the country’s gas ambitions
22 January 2026
As Saudi Arabia pushes mining as a new pillar of its economy, Saudi Aramco is positioning itself at the intersection of hydrocarbons, minerals and industrial policy
22 January 2026
New long-term deal is latest addition to country’s rapidly evolving supply portfolio as it eyes role as regional gas hub






