Saudis in Strategy to Export More Oil to
By SIMON ROMERO and JAD MOUAWAD
New York Times
HOUSTON, Feb. 17 - Saudi Aramco, the world's largest producer of crude oil, is seeking to strengthen relations with energy companies in India and China as part of a strategy to increase Saudi oil exports there. Together, the two countries are expected to account for much of the increase in global oil demand over the next decade.
At the same time, Abdallah S. Jumah, the president and chief executive at Aramco, the energy company controlled by the Saudi kingdom, said on Wednesday that the company was hoping to maintain its position as a leading supplier of petroleum to the
That shift occurred as Saudi Aramco made several efforts to increase its reach in
"Since then, we have been in contact with our Indian friends to find other opportunities," Mr. Jumah said in an interview at Aramco's office in
Aramco, which is based in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, exports about 450,000 barrels of crude oil a day to
The expansion would elevate the complex's capacity to about 240,000 barrels a day, giving Aramco an opportunity to increase oil exports to
Aramco's forays in India and China, together with the awarding of Saudi gas exploration contracts last year to Chinese and Russian companies, has generated concern that Saudi Arabia's traditionally strong relations with the United States, long the country's largest trading partner, might be fraying. Mr. Jumah was careful to point out that he expected oil exports to the
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