H.E. Minister of Commerce and Industry attends inauguration of first annual Gulf Entrepreneurs Forum

His Excellency Sheikh Mohammed bin Hamad bin Qassim Al–Abdullah Al–Thani, Minister of Commerce and Industry, attended the inauguration of the first edition of the annual Gulf Entrepreneurs Forum, taking place in Muscat, Sultanate of Oman, on November 8-11, 2021.

Qatar’s participation in the forum comes as part of the ongoing efforts to shed light on the economic policies and legislation put in place by the State to regulate and support the local entrepreneurship sector, as it represents a fundamental pillar for economic diversification, stimulating investment, and enhancing the contribution of innovation to the economy, as defined in the Qatar National Vision 2030 (QNV 2030).

Qatar is taking part in a number of activities and events organized within the framework of the forum. These include the participation of the Ministry of Commerce and Industry in the jury of the leadership talk competition, in addition to the participation of several Qatari entrepreneurs in the same event. Moreover, Qatar is contributing by presenting a number of working papers listed on the forum’s agenda, including a working paper under the theme ‘Investment Opportunities for Entrepreneurs in GCC States’,titled Mechanisms for Strengthening Partnership between Entrepreneurs & Large Corporations.

The annual Gulf Entrepreneurs Forum is being organized for the first time and it aims tostrengthen the entrepreneurship system among the GCC states, by enhancing cooperation mechanisms between the participating parties and becoming familiar with the relevant procedures and laws in force.

 

Source: Ministry of Commerce and Industry

Asian shares mostly lower after fresh Wall St records

Tokyo, Shares were mostly lower in Asia on Friday, with Chinese markets weighed down by concerns over property developers.

Benchmarks fell in Shanghai, Hong Kong, Tokyo and Seoul but rose in Sydney and Taipei.

Jitters over troubles in the property sector flared after Kaisa Group, a Chinese developer, announced that Hong Kong-traded shares in its companies were suspended after it failed make payments on wealth products it had guaranteed, said AP.

Tightened controls on borrowing by highly leveraged real estate companies have been rattling markets after one of the biggest, Evergrande Group, failed to make payments on some of its debt.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index dropped 0.9% to 24,993.78. The Shanghai Composite index lost 0.3% to 3,517.74.

Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 index shed 0.7% to 29, 593.61, while South Korea’s Kospi declined 0.3% to 2,974.33. In Sydney, the S&P/ASX 500 gained 0.6% to 7,472.60.

On Thursday, the benchmark S&P 500 rose 0.4% to 4,680.06, extending its winning streak to a sixth day. The index has notched a succession of record-high closes, often on days when the market got off to a downbeat start.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average edged 0.1% lower to 36,124.23, ending the blue-chip index’s five-day winning streak, while the Nasdaq added 0.8% to 15,940.31.

The Russell 2000 index of small company stocks slipped 0.1%, to 2,402.43.

Despite the mixed outcome, the market’s latest milestones underscore how traders remain in a buying mood, encouraged by solid company earnings and by the Federal Reserve’s decision, at least for now, to only slowly begin dialing back policies aimed at spurring U.S. economic growth when it was in the throes of the pandemic recession.

On Wednesday, the Fed said it will begin reducing its $120 billion in monthly bond purchases in the coming weeks by $15 billion a month. The central bank could decide to raise its short-term interest rate, which affects many consumer and business loans, from near zero.

Many market watchers concluded that the Fed was moving cautiously in dialing back its support, which is good news for Wall Street.

Investors continued to focus on the latest round of corporate earnings. Chipmaker Qualcomm jumped 12.7% after it gave investors an encouraging profit forecast and reported strong quarterly results. Other chip makers also rallied. Nvidia rose 12% and Advanced Micro Devices rose 5.3%.

Moderna sank 17.9% after cutting its forecast for how many vaccine deliveries it expects to make this year. Merck rose 2.1% after British authorities approved its antiviral pill.

A key concern for investors amid the latest round of earnings has been the impact of supply chain problems on corporate profits and operations. Video streaming company Roku fell 7.7% after giving investors a weak sales forecast and warning that supply chain problems will likely continue into 2022.

The OPEC+ alliance, made up of OPEC members led by the Saudis and non-members led by Russia, rebuffed pressure from U.S. President Joe Biden to pump significantly more oil and lower gasoline prices for U.S. drivers.

The U.S. benchmark lost $2.05 to $78.81 on Thursday. Brent crude, the standard for international pricing, rose 62 cents to $81.17 per barrel.

The U.S. dollar fell to 113.68 Japanese yen from 113.75 Japanese yen. The euro slipped to $1.1544 from $1.1557.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

US employers shrugged off virus and stepped up hiring

Washington, America’s employers stepped up their hiring last month, adding a solid 531,000 jobs, the most since July and a sign that the recovery from the pandemic recession is overcoming a virus-induced slowdown.

Friday’s report from the Labor Department also showed that the unemployment rate fell to 4.6% last month from 4.8% in September. That is a comparatively low level though still well above the pre-pandemic jobless rate of 3.5%.

And the report showed that the job gains in August and September weren’t as weak as initially reported.

The government revised its estimate of hiring for those two months by a hefty combined 235,000 jobs, The Associated Press (AP) reported.

All told, the figures in the jobs report point to an economy that is steadily recovering from the pandemic recession, with healthy consumer spending causing companies in nearly every industry to step up hiring.

Though the effects of COVID-19 are still causing severe supply shortages, heightening inflation and keeping many people out of the workforce, employers are finding gradually more success in filling near record-high job postings.

“This is the kind of recovery we can get when we are not sidelined by a surge in COVID cases,” said Nick Bunker, director of economic research at the employment website Indeed. “The speed of employment gains has faltered at times this year, but the underlying momentum of the US labor market is quite clear.”

By nearly every barometer, the economic recovery appears solidly on track.

Services companies in such areas as retail, banking and warehousing have reported a sharp jump in sales.

More Americans bought new homes last month. And consumer confidence rose in October.

At the same time, though, the nation remains 4.7 million jobs short of the number it had before the pandemic flattened the economy in March 2020. The effects of the virus are still discouraging some people from traveling, shopping, eating out and attending entertainment venues.

In October, the pickup in hiring was spread across nearly every major industry, with only government employers reporting a job loss. Shipping and warehousing companies posted a gain of 54,000 jobs.

Retailers added 35,000. The battered leisure and hospitality sector, which includes, restaurants, bars, hotels and entertainment venues, gained 164,000 jobs. Manufacturers, despite their struggles with supply shortages, added 60,000 jobs, the most since June 2020.

And employers, who have been competing to fill jobs from a diminished pool of applicants, raised wages at a solid clip: Average hourly pay jumped 4.9% in October compared with a year earlier, up from 4.6% the previous month.

Even a gain that strong, though, is barely keeping pace with recent surges in consumer inflation.

The number of long-term unemployed — people out of work for six months or more — has fallen sharply in recent months, to 2.3 million in October from 4.2 million in April. That is still double the pre-recession total.

But it’s an encouraging sign because employers are typically wary of hiring people who haven’t held jobs for an extended period.

One disappointing note in Friday’s report is that the workforce — the number of people either working or looking for a job — was unchanged in October.

That suggested that the reopening of schools in September, the waning of the virus, and the expiration of a $300-a-week federal unemployment supplement have yet to coax many people off the sidelines of the job market in large numbers.

Drawing many people back into the workforce after recessions is typically a prolonged process. There are now 7.4 million people officially out of work — just 1.7 million more than in February 2020, before the pandemic struck the economy.

Yet millions more who lost jobs during the recession have given up on their job hunts, and employers might have to raise pay and benefits to draw them back in.

During the first half of the year, the economy grew at a healthy 6.5% annual rate as vaccinations spread and Americans showed themselves more willing to travel, shop, eat out and attend entertainment events.

Yet the delta variant held economic growth in the July-September quarter to just a 2% annual rate.

More recent economic gauges have cast a brightening picture. And after several rounds of stimulus checks and other government support payments, Americans as a whole have amassed about $2.5 trillion more in savings than they had before the pandemic.

As that money is spent, it will likely fuel further economic activity.

The Conference Board, a business research group, said that in its October consumer confidence survey, the proportion of Americans who said they planned to buy cars, homes or major appliances all rose.

And nearly half the survey respondents said they planned to vacation in the next six months — the highest such proportion since February 2020, before COVID-19 ripped through the economy.

Even so, some companies still can’t find enough workers to fill jobs.

Many parents, particularly mothers, haven’t returned to the workforce after having left jobs during the pandemic to care for children or other relatives. Yet there was evidence of a small rebound last month: The proportion of women who were either working or looking for work rose in October after two months of declines.

Surging inflation has cast a dark cloud over the economy since this spring.

Higher costs for food, heating oil, rents and furniture have burdened millions of families. Prices rose 4.4% in September compared with 12 months earlier, the sharpest such increase in three decades.

That inflation surge was a key reason why the Federal Reserve announced this week that it would begin winding down the stimulus it has given the economy since the pandemic recession struck last year.

The Fed will do so by reducing its monthly bond purchases, which have been intended to hold down long-term interest rates to spur borrowing and spending.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

Airbus shares fall 1% after lower Oct deliveries

Paris, Airbus (AIR.PA) shares slipped on Friday after the planemaker reported that October deliveries were down 10% from the previous month.

Airbus delivered 36 planes in October, down from 40 in each of the two previous months and a monthly peak of 77 in June, Reuters reported.

For the year to date, Airbus has delivered 460 planes, leaving 140 to deliver to reach a year-end target of 600.

Shares in the France-based company fell 1% against a slightly firmer market.

Airbus also sold 22 planes in October, including a previously reported order from Jet2 (JET2.L) for 15 jets.

So far this year it has sold 292 planes, making for a net total of 125 after cancellations.

Airbus remains ahead of Boeing (BA.N) on deliveries but trails its U.S. rival on new orders this year.

For the first nine months of the year, the latest period for which data is available, Boeing delivered 241 jets and sold 710, which drops to 302 after cancellations and other adjustments.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

EDB outlines initiatives to develop key economic sectors

Manama, Following the announcement of the Kingdom’s Economic Recovery Plan, initiated by the directives of His Majesty King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, and following the approval of the plan by the Cabinet, chaired by His Royal Highness Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, the Crown Prince and Prime Minister, His Excellency Khalid Ibrahim Humaidan, the Chief Executive of the Economic Development Board (EDB), announced the Board will be focusing on several initiatives aimed at furthering economic growth and contributing to attracting direct investments across vital economic sectors to achieve the objectives of the plan.

The Economic Growth and Fiscal Balance Plan aims to create quality jobs and enhance Bahrain’s economic competitiveness.

HE Humaidan noted that the plan aims to attract USD $2.5 billion in direct investment by 2023.

The Chief Executive said the Board has successfully attracted increased investment between 2019-2020, indicating that the recovery plan prioritises supporting key sectors to boost economic development.

The sectors include oil and gas, tourism, logistics, financial services, telecommunications, IT and digital economy, and manufacturing, in addition to launching Tamkeen’s new programs to stimulate medium and small companies in these sectors.

The Chief Executive said that the development of these economic sectors will diversify the national economy and support its growth.

HE Humaidan expressed confidence that the successful implementation of Bahrain’s economic recovery plan will be facilitated by its highly qualified and skilled workforce.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

Ministry of Commerce and Industry continues its interactive campaign to support Qatari products

The Ministry of Commerce and Industry is organizing an interactive campaign to support Qatari products, by displaying models of the most prominent Qatari industries until November 7, 2021, in shopping malls.

This step comes as part of the campaign to support Qatari products launched by the Ministry throughout 2021, to support local products and market them directly in the local markets. Moreover, the campaign seeks to raise awareness among consumers of the importance of national products and encourage them to give priority to purchasing them, in addition to supporting entrepreneurs and investors and providing them with the opportunity to have easy access to consumers.

Audiences will also be able to learn about prominent local products, and the mechanisms used in the various stages of manufacturing and production, as well as the relevant vital information and statistics.

The campaign has witnessed cooperation and coordination with a number of malls, and markets in Qatar, with the aim of building models of a number of local products in various sectors in Qatar. These include the manufacture of building materials, electrical equipment, furniture, furnishings, wood, textiles, medicines, paper, and food products. These models also have labels identifying all relevant industrial details, in terms of the number of factories and their products. Additionally, these models have been built in an attractive and interactive manner.

The campaign activities include filming a number of video clips in selected places, showing the stages of installing models and the public’s interaction with the campaign, to be then shared on all the Ministry’s official social media accounts.

The Ministry of Commerce and Industry launched its campaign to support Qatari products during the past year. Throughout the campaign, a number of printed and visual materials were developed and published on the Ministry’s various platforms and social media accounts. Campaign materials included publications on the most prominent local industries, and the number of factories operating in their scope of specialty, and their products, in addition to producing short films on national products and the manufacturing mechanisms that they go through. Moreover, the campaign witnessed the inauguration of two Ministry pavilions in the Mall of Qatar and Doha Festival City, to introduce Qatari products and industries.

Source: Ministry of Commerce and Industry

H.E. Minister of Commerce and Industry participates in Arab Trade Ministers preparatory meeting for WTO’s 12th Ministerial Conference

His Excellency Sheikh Mohammed bin Hamad bin Qassim Al-Abdullah Al-Thani, Minister of Commerce and Industry, participated in the preparatory meeting of the Trade Ministers of the Arab countries, which is hosted by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia via video conferencing, as part of preparations for participation in the 12th World Trade Organization (WTO) Ministerial Conference, taking place from November 30 until December 3, 2021, in Geneva, Switzerland.

Officials discussed topics on the meeting’s agenda related to the preparation for participation in the 12th WTO Ministerial Conference. The topics included the organization’s response to the corona pandemic, multilateral negotiations, including fishery and agriculture negotiations, as well as special and preferential treatment rights for developing countries and LDCs. Officials also touched on ways to accelerate and facilitate admitting Arab countries into the WTO, reforming it, granting the League of Arab States and the State of Palestine an observer status therein, and introducing the Arabic language as a WTO official language.

The preparatory meeting aims to coordinate positions and come up with a unified ministerial statement that serves the interests and concerns of Arab countries within the framework of the WTO, especially issues of common Arab interest.

Source: Ministry of Commerce and Industry

US wages jump by the most in records dating back 20 years

Washington, Wages jumped in the three months ending in September by the most on records dating back 20 years, a stark illustration of the growing ability of workers to demand higher pay from companies that are desperate to fill a near-record number of available jobs, the Associated Press (AP) reported.

Pay increased 1.5% in the third quarter, the Labor Department said Friday. That’s up sharply from 0.9% in the previous quarter. The value of benefits rose 0.9% in the July-September quarter, more than double the preceding three months.

Workers have gained the upper hand in the job market for the first time in at least two decades, and they are commanding higher pay, more benefits, and other perks like flexible work hours. With more jobs available than there are unemployed people, government data shows, businesses have been forced to work harder to attract staff.

Higher inflation is eating away at some of the wage increases, but in recent months overall pay has kept up with rising prices. The 1.5% increase in wages and salaries in the third quarter is ahead of the 1.2% increase in inflation during that period, economists said.

However, compared with a year ago, it’s a closer call. In the year ending in September, wages and salaries soared 4.2%, also a record gain. But the government also reported Friday that prices increased 4.4% in September from year earlier. Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, inflation was 3.6% in the past year.

Jason Furman, a former top economic adviser to President Barack Obama, said Friday that inflation-adjusted wages still trail their pre-pandemic level, given the big price jumps that occurred over the spring and summer for new and used cars, furniture, and airline tickets.

Whether inflation fades in the coming months will determine how much benefit workers get from higher pay.

Many economists expect inflation to slow a bit, while wages are likely to keep rising.

Pay is rising much faster in the recovery from the pandemic recession than in the recovery from the Great Recession of 2008-2009, when wage growth kept slowing until a year after that downturn ended. That’s because of the different nature of the two recessions and the different policy responses.

There has been much more government stimulus during and after the pandemic recession compared with the previous one, including the $2 trillion financial support package signed by former President Donald Trump in March 2020 and the $1.9 trillion in aid approved by President Joe Biden this March. Both packages provided stimulus checks and enhanced unemployment benefits that fueled greater spending.

Lower-paid workers have seen the biggest gains, with pay rising for employees at restaurants, bars and hotels by 8.1% in the third quarter from a year earlier. For retail workers it’s jumped 5.9%.

The healthy increase for disadvantaged workers “is the result of specific policy choices to give workers a better bargaining hand and to ensure the economy recovered faster,” said Mike Konczal, a director at the left-leaning Roosevelt Institute. “The fact that it’s happening is pretty unique.”

The stimulus checks and an extra $300 a week in jobless benefits, which ended in early September, gave those out of work more leverage to demand higher pay, Konczal said. In addition, the Fed’s low-interest rate policies helped spur more spending, raising the demand for workers.

In August, there were 10.4 million jobs available, down from the 11 million in July, which was the most in two decades.

Millions of Americans are responding to rising wages by quitting their jobs for better-paying positions. In August, nearly 3% of American workers quit their jobs, a record high. A higher number of quits also means companies have to raise pay to keep their employees.

Workers who switch jobs are seeing some of the sharpest income gains in decades. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, in September job-switchers saw their pay jump 5.4% compared with a year earlier. That’s up from just 3.4% in May and the biggest increase in nearly 20 years. For those who stayed in their jobs, pay rose 3.5%.

Esther Cano, 26, is one of those who found a new job that paid more in the July-September quarter. A recent college graduate who isn’t yet sure of her long-term career path, she left a job as a dispatcher at an HVAC firm in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, for a position at the job placement agency Robert Half. She started in July and got a raise of about 10%.

“What I was requesting was lower than what they were willing to pay,” Cano said. “It was a no-brainer on that end, plus the environment, the room for growth, the opportunity.”

Cano has already gotten a promotion to a team leader position, where she helps place temporary employees who work in finance and accounting.

Most economists expect solid wage gains to continue for the coming months. Data from the Indeed job listings website shows that employers are still posting huge numbers of available jobs.

Higher pay can fuel inflation, as companies raise prices to cover their increased costs. But that’s not the only way businesses can respond. Lydia Boussour, an economist at Oxford Economics, notes that corporate profits in the April-June quarter were at their highest level in nearly a decade. That suggests many companies can pay higher salaries without having to lift prices.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

G20 leaders endorse global minimum corporate tax deal for 2023 start

Rome, Leaders of the world’s 20 biggest economies (G20) will endorse an OECD deal on a global minimum corporate tax of 15%, draft conclusions of the two-day G20 summit showed on Saturday, with a view to have the rules in force in 2023.

“We call on the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting to swiftly develop the model rules and multilateral instruments as agreed in the Detailed Implementation Plan, with a view to ensure that the new rules will come into effect at global level in 2023,” the draft conclusions, seen by Reuters, said.

The conclusions are to be formally adopted on Sunday, Reuters reported.

In October, 136 countries reached a deal on a minimum tax on global corporations, including internet giants like Google (GOOGL.O) , Amazon (AMZN.O), Facebook (FB.O), Microsoft (MSFT.O) or Apple (AAPL.O) to make it harder for them to avoid taxation by establishing offices in low-tax jurisdictions.

“This is more than just a tax deal, it’s a reshaping of the rules of the global economy,” a senior U.S. official told reporters.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

Gulf Arab States, Squeezed by Climate Change, Still Tout Oil

RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA — The global energy transition is perhaps nowhere more perplexing than in the Arabian Peninsula, where Saudi Arabia and other Gulf monarchies are caught between two daunting climate change scenarios that threaten their livelihoods.

In one, the world stops burning oil and gas to cut down on heat-trapping emissions, shaking the very foundation of their economies. In the other, global temperatures keep rising, at the risk of rendering unlivable much of the Gulf’s already extremely hot terrain.

The political stability of the six Gulf states — Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman — is rooted in profits from fossil fuels. This includes exports that energy-hungry China and India will want even more over the next two decades.

“Climate action, it’s almost an existential problem for an absolute monarchy based on oil exports,” said Jim Krane, author of “Energy Kingdoms: Oil and Political Survival in the Persian Gulf.”

“They need climate action to succeed without wrecking the oil market. That’s a tough needle to thread.”

In pledging “net-zero” emissions targets as Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain have done this month, greenhouse gas emissions would be cut within their borders — while maintaining fossil fuel exports abroad.

Saudi Arabia, which supplies about one-tenth of the world’s oil demand, made its announcement this week while hosting its first major climate change forum. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman set 2060 as Saudi Arabia’s target.

It was an important announcement for a country with an estimated 265 billion barrels of oil reserves worth $22.5 trillion at current prices. Saudi Arabia has expressed determination to pump oil until the last drop, but it could find little use for its greatest natural resource in a world that runs on cleaner forms of renewable and solar energy.

Gulf monarchies have used oil revenue to maintain domestic support, buy regional clout and expand influence. The money has built up national armies and provided citizens with cushy public sector jobs, free health care and higher education, subsidized fuel, land to build homes on, marriage dowries and generous pensions.

Without this patronage system, Gulf monarchies might have to allow greater political participation or turn more repressive, said Krane, an energy studies fellow at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy in Texas.

Gulf Arab states pledging “net zero” emissions are positioning themselves to be part of the multi-trillion-dollar clean energy industry, even as they keep earning from oil and gas.

At the Saudi Green Initiative Forum in Riyadh, President Joe Biden’s climate envoy, John Kerry, told a roomful of princes and prime ministers from across the region that climate action can create “the biggest market opportunity the world has ever known.”

“It’s the biggest transformation that has ever taken place on this planet, since the industrial revolution, if we do it,” Kerry said.

The “net zero” pledges also crucially enable the Gulf’s ruling elite to wield influence at conferences like COP26, where climate action policies are being crafted, said Ellen Wald, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and author of “Saudi Inc.”

“It’s important for them to have a seat at the table and be taken seriously at these conferences… because that way they get a say,” she said.

Saudi Arabia is one of several countries lobbying behind the scenes ahead of the COP26 summit to change language around emissions, apparently trying to water down an upcoming U.N. science panel report on global warming, according to leaked documents.

Gulf Arab states are privately and publicly advocating for carbon capture technologies rather than a rapid phasing out of fossil fuels, warning that a hurried transition would leave poorer populations without access to energy.

Greenpeace, which obtained the leaked documents, has criticized the approach, saying these “yet unproven” carbon capture technologies allow nations to emit more greenhouse gases on the optimistic assumption they can be drawn out of the atmosphere later.

Meanwhile, national energy companies like Saudi Aramco, Abu Dhabi’s ADNOC and Qatar Petroleum — now re-branded as Qatar Energy — are moving ahead with efforts to reduce emissions and boost investments in petrochemical products used in fertilizers, plastics, rubber and other polymers that are in huge demand globally.

Aramco, by far the world’s biggest oil company, announced it would reach “net zero” by 2050 on its operations, a decade sooner than the Saudi government’s pledge. ADNOC has pledged to decrease its greenhouse gas emissions by 25% by 2030.

Qatar Petroleum has already shipped one carbon-neutral cargo of LNG gas to Singapore and will be incorporating carbon capture technology in its expansion plans, according to a report by the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.

Speaking at the forum in Riyadh, ADNOC CEO Sultan Al-Jaber called on people to be “a bit mature and sober” in discussing the energy transition, insisting it will take time and must include oil and gas.

“We can’t just come out of nowhere and all of a sudden speak about energy transition and completely ignore or underestimate the impact of oil and gas in helping meet global energy requirements,” Al-Jaber said, noting that 80% of total energy requirements currently come from fossil fuels, with 60% of that oil and gas.

OPEC forecasts that while the push for alternative and renewable energy will usher in an era of declining demand for oil in some parts of the world, it will remain the world’s No. 1 source of energy through 2045. It forecasts that of the 2.6 billion cars on the road by 2045, just 20% will be electric-powered.

Although all six Gulf states remain heavily reliant on fossil fuels for state spending, each has taken steps to try to diversify their economies, with Saudi Arabia and the UAE leading aggressive efforts to attract investment in new industries.

Still, over half of Saudi Arabia’s revenue comes from oil, with $150 billion expected this year alone as prices climb to $85 a barrel.

“Oil exports are the lifeblood of the Saudi economy and the Saudi political system,” said Krane. “It would be a disaster for Saudi Arabia if the rest of the world quickly weaned itself off oil.”

Scientists say the world must invest in renewable energy to limit warming to 2.7° F (1.5° C), although a new U.N. report finds that even governments’ fresh pledges aren’t strict enough to keep temperature rises below that by the end of the century.

Nearly all of the warming that has happened on Earth can be blamed on emissions of heat-trapping gases such as carbon dioxide and methane, and if the limit is surpassed scientists say the damage will be irreversible.

In remarks to reporters this month, Qatari Energy Minister Saad al-Kaabi questioned whether countries that have “net-zero” pledges have a plan on how to get there.

“For me to just come out and say, ‘Net zero 2050’. Very sexy,” he said. “I mean, looks great in the newspaper, but it’s not the right thing.”

Source: Voice of America