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US senator says new Iran sanctions won't disrupt oil
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 29, 2011


Saudi Arabia has expressed "great willingness" to boost oil production to ensure potential new US sanctions on Iran don't disrupt global petroleum markets, a key US senator said Tuesday.

Republican Senator Mark Kirk, co-author of a bill aimed at cutting off Iran's central bank from the world financial system, was addressing worries that his legislation could inadvertently send oil prices higher, lining Tehran's pockets.

"I've had detailed conversations with Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the United States, who described a great willingness by Saudi Arabia to increase production," to remedy that potential issue, Kirk told reporters.

The senator said he and Democratic Senator Robert Menendez met with aides to President Barack Obama earlier in the day to make the case that the administration should drop its opposition to the sanctions bill.

"I don't think that they were swayed," according to Kirk, who said that the two lawmakers had stressed that the legislation gives the administration "considerable flexibility in handling" the imposition of sanctions.

"There are several months before action by the administration, so it gives time for diplomacy to work, it gives time for markets to adjust, and most importantly it gives time for the Saudis to increase production," he said.

"Unless we take decisive action on sanctioning, I think what Iran is doing actually destabilizes oil markets in a more significant way," said Kirk, who cited "the takeover of the British embassy" and new reports seen as backing Western charges that Tehran seeks nuclear weapons.

"The attainment of a nuclear weapon by Iran would destabilize world markets far more than any action of the senate," he said. "Time is not on our side."

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China calls for resolution of Sudan oil dispute
Beijing (AFP) Nov 29, 2011 - China on Tuesday called on the governments of Sudan and South Sudan to settle a dispute that has blocked oil exports from the landlocked south from flowing through the north's terminals on the Red Sea.

China depends for nearly five percent of its oil imports on South Sudan, a new country long suspicious of Beijing's ties with Khartoum.

"Regular oil production is important to both North and South Sudan," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told journalists at a briefing on Tuesday.

"We hope both sides will keep calm, exercise restraint and take a flexible and pragmatic approach to resolving confrontations."

Khartoum blocked the exports on Monday in a dispute over transit fees with South Sudan, which said the move had paralysed two loads, one of a million barrels and the other of 600,000 barrels.

The state-run China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) has pumped billions of dollars into developing oilfields in Sudan, 80 percent of which lie in the south.

In July, southern Sudan seceded from its larger and long-dominant north and China has sought to maintain good relations with both countries.

China is a key ally of Khartoum, which has suffered from US economic sanctions since 1997. It is a a major military supplier to the Khartoum regime, as well as one of the largest foreign investors and the biggest buyers of Sudanese oil.



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As refinery opens, Niger joins club of oil producers
Olelewa, Niger (AFP) Nov 28, 2011
Niger officially became an oil producer Monday with the opening of a refinery run by the state and a Chinese company. Niger's President Mahamadou Issoufou and China National Petroleum Corporation boss Jiang Jiemin cut the red ribbon at the new plant at Olelewa in the east, near the country's second city Zinder. "Niger has entered the era of oil production," Issoufou said as he inaugurate ... read more


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