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OPEC+’s cohesive restraint
The alliance is keeping output on track and the market in balance amid geopolitical tensions and a fragile supply-demand ledger
Letter from Saudi Arabia: Big oil meets big shovel
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
Outlook 2026: From wells to wafers – How MENA is powering the new energy–data nexus
Leading economies in the region are using oil and gas revenues to fund mineral strategies and power hyperscale computing
OPEC’s discipline sets tone for 2026
OPEC+ remains on track as output falls, with only Gabon failing to hit its output targets in December, although Kazakhstan’s compliance was involuntary
OPEC presses pause
The group’s oil production declined in November, our latest analysis finds, amid divided sentiment over market balances and geopolitical jitters
Letter from Saudi Arabia: US-Saudi energy ties enter a new phase
Aramco’s pursuit of $30b in US gas partnerships marks a strategic pivot. The US gains capital and certainty; Saudi Arabia gains access, flexibility and a new export future
Letter from London: Oil’s golden triangle
The interplay between OPEC+, China and the US will define oil markets throughout 2026
OPEC+ nears output targets amid unsolved riddles
OPEC+ has proven to be astute at bringing back oil production, but mysteries around Chinese buying, missing barrels and oil-on-water have left the group in wait-and-see mode
Accelerating MENA’s gas transformation
Gas has become a pillar of MENA economies and a catalyst for development strategies, fostering cooperation and creating new paths for economic diversification. Continued progress will require substantial investment and adapted regulations
Mideast states power up their gas priorities
Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar are ploughing resources into gas—with a growing eye on facilitating domestic use in power and value-added sectors
GCC Qatar Saudi Arabia Opec Oil markets
Derek Brower
8 June 2017
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Could the Qatar crisis spike oil prices?

The market wants to shrug off the Riyadh-Doha spat. It’s a risky position

An oil market that loses 4% on a day when Islamic State (IS) attacks Iran's parliament, Tehran blames Riyadh, and Donald Trump tweets his support as Saudi Arabia tries to humiliate another Gulf state is entering unusual territory. Bears still believe tight oil growth, modest US consumption and the frailty of the Opec deal can overwhelm the rising geopolitical risks in the Middle East. It raises the chance of a price shock. The Saudi vs Qatar scrap may end quickly, with the countries' rulers dancing to a more peaceful drumbeat again. But the signs are not good. Riyadh and the other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states on its side are demanding Doha's capitulation. Qatar's willingness to de

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