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
Beneath the pomp, circumstance and controversy of the visit of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to Washington, several agreements were reached that may matter far more than the choreography from the Oval Office. Oil policy was not the centre of discussion, largely because Saudi and American thinking has converged. Both expect strong demand for hydrocarbons well into the 2030s. Both favour continued investment in supply. And both understand the global economy is unlikely to transition away from oil at anything like the speed demanded by climate activists. In this respect, their approaches remain aligned with the old US instinct to ensure abundant supply rather than constrain it. $
Also in this section
3 March 2026
The killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei in US–Israeli strikes marks the most serious escalation in the region in decades and a bigger potential threat to the oil market than the start of the Russia-Ukraine crisis
2 March 2026
A potential blockade of the Strait of Hormuz following the escalating US-Iran conflict risks disrupting Qatari LNG exports that underpin global gas markets, exposing Asia and other markets to sharp price spikes, cargo shortages and renewed reliance on dirtier fuels
2 March 2026
The South Asian consumer’s next move could tighten the Middle East oil market overnight
2 March 2026
Canadian independent’s evolving portfolio in Trinidad and Tobago gives it access to the Atlantic LNG market and a close-up view of developments in neighbouring Venezuela






