Bangladesh seeks extended oil credit from Saudi Arabia
Cash-strapped Bangladesh asked Saudi Arabia for extended credit on oil supplies, Dhaka’s foreign ministry said, as the South Asian nation grapples with dwindling foreign exchange reserves.
For the latest headlines, follow our Google News channel online or via the app.
Saudi Arabia supplies more than half of Bangladesh’s crude imports, but Bangladesh has been hit hard by the global surge in energy and food prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
At the same time the taka has depreciated about 25 percent against the US dollar, driving up costs for petrol distributors and power utilities that have rippled across the rest of the economy.
Nationwide blackouts of up to 13 hours a day hit the electricity grid last year and the government offered food relief for households unable to afford rice and other staples.
In a meeting Wednesday with Riyadh’s ambassador, foreign minister A.K. Abdul Momen asked Saudi Arabia to consider supplying crude and refined oil “on a deferred payment basis”, the foreign ministry said in a statement.
The economic strains come with a general election due by next January.
The opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party has blamed the government for the crisis, accusing it of squandering cash on multibillion-dollar vanity projects.
It has organized a series of rallies demanding Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s resignation and an early poll under a neutral administration.
Authorities hiked retail electricity prices by five percent Tuesday, the second such increase in three weeks, while gas prices for generators were raised by an eye-watering 178 percent last month.
On Monday, the International Monetary Fund signed off on a $4.7 billion support package for Bangladesh.
The South Asian country’s foreign exchange reserves have dropped from $46 billion in January last year to $32 billion at the end of last month.
Bangladesh’s official inflation rate is around 8.7 percent but independent economists say the true figure is substantially higher.
Read more:
Oil gains ground as traders size up weaker dollar, China outlook
Saudi Crown Prince, Putin discuss OPEC+ cooperation for oil market stability: Kremlin
-
Oil gains ground as traders size up weaker dollar, China outlook
Oil staged a partial rebound after slumping on Wednesday as the US dollar fell and traders weighed the potential for better demand in China.For the ... Energy -
Saudi Crown Prince, Putin discuss OPEC+ cooperation for oil market stability: Kremlin
Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman discussed in a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin cooperation within the OPEC+ group ... Energy -
Saudi Arabia’s oil revenue falls to lowest since February
Saudi Arabia’s revenue from exports of crude oil and products such as diesel fell to $25.5 billion in October, the Kingdom’s statistics office said on ... Energy