Saudi Aramco Says Annual Profit More Than Doubled In 2021

Energy giant Saudi Aramco said Sunday its 2021 net profit soared by more than 120%, due to higher crude prices, as global economic growth recovered from a pandemic induced downturn.

The announcement came hours after Yemen’s Houthi rebels — against whom Saudi Arabia leads a military coalition — targeted several locations, including Aramco facilities, in cross-border armed drone attacks.

Aramco, Saudi Arabia’s cash cow, did not say if the attacks caused damage.

“Aramco’s net income increased by 124% to $110.0 billion in 2021, compared to $49.0 billion in 2020,” the company said in a statement.

Aramco achieved a net income of $88.2 billion in 2019 before the coronavirus pandemic hit global markets, resulting in huge losses for the oil and aviation sectors, among others.

A strong rebound last year saw oil prices recover from their 2020 lows, and they have soared to highs not seen since 2014 this year, amid global supply shortages and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Aramco floated 1.7% of its shares on the Saudi bourse in December 2019, generating $29.4 billion in the world’s biggest initial public offering.

“Our strong results are a testament to our financial discipline, flexibility through evolving market conditions and steadfast focus on our long-term growth strategy,” Aramco president and CEO Amin Nasser said in a statement.

“Although economic conditions have improved considerably, the outlook remains uncertain due to various macroeconomic and geopolitical factors,” he said.

“But our investment plan aims to tap into rising long-term demand for reliable, affordable and ever more secure and sustainable energy,” he added.

“We recognize that energy security is paramount for billions of people around the world, which is why we continue to make progress on increasing our crude oil production capacity, executing our gas expansion program and increasing our liquids to chemicals capacity.”

Since Mohammed bin Salman’s appointment as crown prince in 2017, Saudi Arabia has sought to diversify its oil-dominated economy.

In February, the kingdom — one of the world’s top crude exporters — moved 4% of Aramco shares worth $80 billion to the country’s sovereign wealth fund.

The transfer was also as a sign that Saudi Arabia wants to further open the oil giant and “crown jewel” of the Saudi economy, the Arab world’s largest.

The crown prince said last year that Aramco was in talks to sell a 1% stake to a foreign energy giant.

Brent crude is currently selling at more than $100 per barrel — in part due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Russia is the world’s largest producer of gas and one of the biggest oil producers and is grappling with mounting Western sanctions.

Oil-rich Gulf countries, including Saudi Arabia, have so far resisted Western pressure to raise oil output to rein in prices, stressing their commitment to the OPEC+ alliance of oil producers, which Riyadh and Moscow lead.

 

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Yemen Rebels Launch Barrage of Strikes on Saudi Sites

Yemen’s Houthi rebels unleashed one of their most intense barrages of drone and missile strikes on Saudi Arabia’s critical energy facilities on Sunday, sparking a fire at one site and temporarily cutting oil production at another.

The salvo marked a serious escalation of rebel attacks on the kingdom as the war in Yemen rages into its eighth year and peace talks stall.

The attacks did not cause casualties, the Saudi-led military coalition fighting in Yemen said, but struck sites belonging to one of the world’s most important energy companies and damaged civilian vehicles and homes. The coalition also said it destroyed a remotely piloted boat packed with explosives dispatched by the Houthis in the busy southern Red Sea.

Hours after oil giant Aramco’s CEO Amin H. Nasser told reporters the attacks had no impact on oil supplies, the Saudi energy ministry acknowledged that a drone strike targeting the Yanbu Aramco Sinopec Refining Company caused “a temporary reduction in the refinery’s production.”

The disruption, as oil prices spike in an already-tight energy market, “will be compensated for from the inventory,” the ministry said, without elaborating.

Another aerial attack later in the day struck a fuel tank at an Aramco distribution station in the port city of Jiddah and ignited a fire.

The relentless wave of strikes revealed the expanding reach and precision of the rebels and the persistent gaps in the kingdom’s air defenses. A sophisticated strike in 2019 on Aramco oil facilities knocked out half the kingdom’s oil production and threatened to ignite a regional crisis — an attack that the U.S. and Riyadh later alleged came from Iran.

The attacks on Sunday came as Saudi Arabia’s state-backed Aramco, the world’s largest oil company, announced its profits surged 124% in 2021 to $110 billion, a jump fueled by renewed anxieties about global supply shortages and soaring oil prices.

Aramco, also known as the Saudi Arabian Oil Co., released its annual earnings after weeks of intense volatility in energy markets triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The international oil benchmark Brent crude spiked over $107 on Sunday after nearly hitting a peak of $140 earlier this month. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have so far resisted Western appeals to increase oil production to offset the loss of Russian oil as gasoline prices skyrocket.

Yehia Sarie, a spokesman for Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthis, said the rebels had launched “a wide and large military operation” in retaliation for the Saudi-led “aggression and blockade” that has turned much of Yemen into a wasteland.

The escalation followed a flurry of diplomacy over the weekend in Oman’s capital of Muscat. The U.N. special envoy for Yemen, Hans Grundberg, met with the chief Houthi negotiator and Omani officials to discuss “a possible truce during the holy month of Ramadan” in early April, the U.N. mission said.

The White House condemned the attacks, blaming Iran for supplying the Houthis with missile and drone parts, as well as training and expertise.

“It is time to bring this war to a close, but that can only happen if the Houthis agree to cooperate with the United Nations,” said U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan. “The United States stands fully behind those efforts.”

The Saudi-led military coalition reported aerial strikes on a range of facilities: an Aramco liquified gas plant in the Red Sea port of Yanbu, an oil storage plant in Jiddah, a desalination facility in Al-Shaqeeq on the Red Sea coast and an Aramco oil facility in the southern border town of Jizan, among others.

The extent of damage on Saudi infrastructure remained unclear, and the ministry said only the Yanbu refinery saw a temporary drop in output. A joint venture between Aramco and China, the $10 billion Yanbu Aramco Sinopec Refining Company on the Red Sea pumps 400,000 barrels of oil a day.

The Saudi Press Agency shared photos of firetrucks dousing leaping flames with water and a trail of rubble wrought by shrapnel that crashed through ceilings and pocked apartment walls. Other images showed wrecked cars and giant craters in the ground.

The barrage comes days after the Saudi-based Gulf Cooperation Council invited Yemen’s warring sides for peace talks in Riyadh — an offer dismissed out of hand by the Houthis, who demanded that negotiations take place in a “neutral” country.

Negotiations have floundered since the Houthis have tried to capture oil-rich Marib, one of the last remaining strongholds of the Saudi-backed Yemeni government in the country’s north.

Yemen’s brutal war erupted in 2014, after the Iran-backed Houthis seized the country’s capital, Sanaa. Saudi Arabia and its allies launched a devastating air campaign to dislodge the Houthis and restore the internationally recognized government.

But years later, the war has settled into a bloody stalemate and created one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world.

Coalition airstrikes have struck civilian targets in Yemen like hospitals, telecommunications centers and wedding parties, drawing widespread international criticism.

Repeated Houthi cross-border attacks have rattled world energy markets and raised the risk of disruptions to output at Aramco sites.

As part of its 2021 report, Aramco said it stuck to its promise of paying quarterly dividends of $18.75 billion — $75 billion last year — due to commitments the company made to shareholders in the run-up to its initial public offering. Nearly all of the dividend money goes to the Saudi government.

Despite Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s increasing efforts to diversify the Saudi economy away from oil, the kingdom remains heavily dependent on oil exports to fuel government spending.

Riding on its 2021 income surge, Aramco said it expects to raise its capital expenditure to between $40 and $50 billion this year to meet growing energy demand, a sizable increase from last year’s spending of $31.9 billion.

Aramco shares were up over 3% on Sunday to trade around 43.20 riyals ($11.50) a share on Riyadh’s Tadawul stock exchange.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

GCC Secretary General condemns Houthi’s attacks against Saudi Arabia

Riyadh: Secretary General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Dr. Nayef Falah M. Al Hajraf has strongly condemned the Houthi terrorist group’s continued systematic attacks against Saudi Arabia.

 

The terrorist attack used missiles and drones against civilians and civilian installations in Jazan, Khamis Mushait, Taif, Yanbu, and Dhahran Al Janoub, in flagrant violation of international norms and laws.

 

The secretary general praised the high efficiency and continuous vigilance of the Saudi Air Defense Forces, stressing the solidarity of the GCC member states with Saudi Arabia against everything that targets its security, stability, and territorial integrity.

 

Dr. Al Hajraf called on the international community to take immediate and decisive measures to stop these aggressive actions targeting vital and civilian facilities and the security of Saudi Arabia.

 

 

Source: Bahrain News Agency

General Secretariat of Council of Arab Interior Ministers Condemns Houthi Militia’s Launching of Ballistic Missiles, Drones towards Saudi Arabia

Tunis– The General Secretariat of the Council of Arab Interior Ministers has condemned the dangerous attacks by the terrorist Houthi militia and its deliberate and systematic attempts to target safe civilians and some civilian objects and economic facilities in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia through launching ballistic missiles and bomb-laden drones, which the Saudi air defenses managed to intercept and destroy.

The general secretariat, in a statement today, stressed its strongest condemnation of these terrorist acts and hostile practices that represent war crimes that should be held accountable, where these practices are considered a clear evidence of this Iran-backed militia to persist on its flagrant violations to all sanctities, humanitarian boundaries and morals and international laws and norms, through its continuous rejection to adhere to calls of peace and Arab and international efforts and initiatives exerted to reach a political solution for the Yemeni crisis.

The general secretariat also highlighted the importance for taking decisive and firm positions towards these continuous attacks and hold its perpetrators accountable, renewing its utter support to all procedures and measures taken by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to protect its security, stability and the sovereignty of its territories, praising the heroic roles of the Saudi air force and coalition forces in confronting all these attempts aimed at tampering with the security and stability of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the safety of its facilities, citizens and residents.

 

 

Source: Saudi Press Agency

GCC Secretary General Strongly Condemns Houthi Militia’s Ballistic Missiles Attacks against Saudi Arabia

Riyadh– Secretary General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) for Arab States Dr. Nayef Falah Mubarak Al-Hajraf has strongly condemned the Houthi militia’s continuous launching of ballistic missiles and bomb-laden drones in a systematic and deliberate manner targeting innocent civilians and civilian facilities in Jazan, Khamis Mushait, Taif, Yanbu and Dhahran Al Janub, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, in a flagrant violation of international norms and laws.

The secretary general commended the skills and vigilance of Saudi Air Defenses.

Dr. Nayef Al-Hajraf reiterated the GCC states’ solidarity with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia against whatever targets its security, stability and territorial integrity, calling on the international community to take immediate and decisive measures to stop these aggressive acts targeting civilian and vital facilities as well as the security of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

 

 

Source: Saudi Press Agency

Pakistan Strongly Condemns Houthi Militia’s Attacks on Saudi Arabia

Islamabad– The Islamic Republic of Pakistan has strongly condemned the Houthi militia’s launch of a ballistic missile towards Jazan, which aimed against civilians and economic installations in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

The Pakistani Foreign Ministry, in a statement issued today, said: “the successful interception of the ballistic missile by the Royal Saudi Air Defense Force prevented loss of innocent lives and is commendable. Such attacks do not only violate international law but also threaten peace and security of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the region.”

The ministry noted that Pakistan calls for immediate cessation of these attacks.

Pakistan reaffirmed its full support and solidarity with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia against any threats to its security and territorial integrity.

 

Source: Saudi Press Agency