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| Bring Justice To Syria |
WE are told that we should
avoid civil war in Syria,
even as it unfolds before
our eyes. We threaten,
and yet we don't act. We
hold international meeting after
international meeting, but each
delivers only a small batch of sanctions
and escalating ... |
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| HOW NOT TO
SOLVE A CRISIS |
THERE is a delicious
moment in the HBO film
Too Big to Fail when
Christine Lagarde, then
France's minister of
finance, calls Hank Paulson, the
US Treasury secretary. It's
September 2008, and "Hank," she
scolds him. "How could you let
Lehman fail? What on ... |
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India seeks more crude, LNG from Qatar, S Arabia
ZAWYA DOW JONES
NEW DELHI INDIA has sought more crude oil and liquefied natural gas from Saudi Arabia, Algeria and Qatar as the US and European Union sanctions against Tehran are posing significant challenges in sourcing oil from Iran.
India has also sought more time from Iran to settle the terms of a proposed service contract to develop Phase 12 of the giant South Pars gas field in the Persian Gulf, an oil ministry statement said on Thursday.
The South Asian nation raised its demand for additional cargoes during meetings between Oil Minister Jaipal Reddy and the energy ministers of Saudi Arabia, Algeria and Qatar in Vienna, where members of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries are discussing their production quotas.
Indian refiners plan to cut oil imports from Iran by 11 percent to 310,000 barrels a day in the current financial year that began on April 1 as the US and the European Union tighten sanctions against Tehran over its nuclear programme.
Although the US this week exempted India and some other countries from the sanctions, transporting crude from Iran is getting trickier as shipping companies rely on US and European firms to provide insurance coverage — arrangements that are now much more difficult to secure than they were earlier.
India, which has a refining capacity of 4.26 million barrels a day, meets more than 80 percent of the crude oil it requires through imports, making it highly reliant on oil exporters.
Reddy asked Saudi Oil Minister Ali Naimi for 100,000 barrels a day more crude for the current financial year from the 640,000 barrels a day it supplied last year. He also asked for an additional 1.5 million metric tons of cooking gas for the current year. Saudi Arabia is India’s largest supplier of crude oil and cooking gas. He also sought more crude and liquefied natural gas from Algeria and Qatar.
On the South Pars field, the ministry said Reddy has sought more time during his meeting with Iran’s petroleum minister.
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