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UAE allays India’s fear over shortage of oil

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UAE allays India’s fear over shortage of oil
The Indian Express

Even as the US-imposed sanctions on Iran has put India’s energy security in jeopardy, UAE Ambassador to India Ahmed Albanna has allayed fears of an oil shortage, saying his country as well as Saudi Arabia can fill in if supply from Iran is disrupted.

“Production is the important element there,to ensure that the production is enough for the world consumption of oil,” said Albanna when asked about rising fuel prices in India.

He said that consumer countries have been faced with most of the problems because of challenges faced by some Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) countries as also non-OPEC countries.

However, at the same time, he said that India need not fear shortage of oil with the new US sanctions on Iran set to take effect in November this year. Iran is the second-largest supplier of crude oil to India, supplying more than 425,000 barrels of oil per day, and India is one of the biggest foreign investors in Iran’s oil and gas industry.

“Saudi Arabia was able to rectify the matter and supply India in the face of the shortage that took place because of the embargo. The same thing will happen this time I guess in November, when the embargo takes place,” he said.

The Ambassador said that because India enjoys a great relationship with the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Saudi Arabia and Iraq, the alternatives are there all the time.

Regarding energy giants Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc) and Saudi Aramco jointly investing in the development of the $44-billion Ratnagiri refinery and petrochemicals complex in Maharashtra, Albanna said that it is a strategic project with a trilateral arrangement.

Due to the close and strategic relationship between the UAE and Saudi Arabia and between India and both UAE and Saudi Arabia, we have been able to reach such an agreement, he said. It will be beneficial to all parties.

Earlier this year, the first consignment of two million barrels of crude oil from the UAE for India’s strategic petroleum reserve in Karnataka’s Mangaluru landed on the west coast. This consignment fills one of the two strategic reserve caverns at Mangaluru under an agreement between Adnoc and the Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Ltd (ISPRL).

Albanna also highlighted the close ties between India and the UAE which were elevated to that of a Comprehensive and Strategic Partnership during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the Gulf nation in August 2015, the first prime ministerial visit from India to that country in 34 years.

Also read: Energy, security, trade to top Modi’s agenda in three-nation tour

This was followed by the visit of Abu Dhabi Crown Prince and Deputy Commander of the UAE Armed Forces to India Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan in 2016 and then again in 2017 as the chief guest for India’s Republic Day celebrations. Modi again visited the UAE last year where he delivered the keynote address at the World Government Summit in Dubai.

Stating that India is one of the first countries with which the UAE has signed a strategic agreement, he said there are collaborations at many different levels.

He also referred to UAE Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan’s week-long visit to India last month and said that there are many outcomes of the visit which we are now at the stage of following up and look at the best way of implementation.

The UAE is home to a nearly three million-strong expatriate Indian population.

With the inputs of IANS. 

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