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A Saudi man looks at an employee filling the tank of his car with petrol at a station in Jeddah. Photo: AAFP

New | Saudi Arabia sees oil reserves lasting 70 years

Wealth of world’s biggest oil exporter comes from crude sales

Commodities

Saudi Arabia, the biggest oil exporter, sees its crude reserves of 266.5 billion barrels lasting 70 more years and hasn’t sought an independent consultant to review the figures, according to a bond prospectus seen by Bloomberg.

The nation’s wealth is based mainly on oil, with crude sales accounting for 75 per cent of total export earnings, according to the prospectus. Saudi Arabia plans to sell at least US$10 billion in bonds maturing in five, 10 and 30 years, and it disclosed plans to hold investor meetings in London, Los Angeles, Boston and New York starting on Wednesday.

The country is seeking funds to shore up public finances that have been hit by the drop in oil prices to about half their 2014 levels. At the same time, the kingdom plans to wean itself off dependence on oil for state revenue by selling part of its state oil company to help develop industries including auto manufacturing and technology.

State-run Saudi Arabian Oil Co. plans to sell shares to investors by 2018 and is still deciding where to list the shares, Chief Executive Officer Amin Nasser said in Istanbul.

“Saudi Aramco disclosing more information on its reserves is a major step needed before listing its shares,” Chris Gunson, a partner with Amereller Legal Consultants, said by phone from Munich. “It’s one thing to fulfil regulatory requirements, it’s another to see what investors will require to convince them to buy the stock -- they may well require independent verification.”

Amin al-Nasser, (R), president of state oil giant Saudi Aramco, speaks during the 23rd World Energy Congress in Istanbul. Photo: AFP

International oil companies report reserves -- the amount of hydrocarbons to which they have access and which they can profitably pump -- to show they’re finding enough new deposits to replace the crude they’re selling. Saudi Arabia’s reserves are the world’s second largest after Venezuela’s, according to BP’s annual statistical review. Saudi Aramco would be an anomaly among listed oil companies since its reserves make up the bulk of a single country’s oil.

Saudi Aramco will open its financial data for investors, Nasser said. The company is evaluating listing shares on stock exchanges including those in New York, London and Tokyo, he said.

The kingdom could sell stakes either in Saudi Aramco, which held about 261 billion barrels of total Saudi reserves, its subsidiaries, or both, according to the prospectus.

The Saudi methodology for calculating its reserves may differ from that used by other producers or US securities regulators, according to the prospectus.

In the US, the Securities and Exchange Commission regulates reserve calculations made by companies that are publicly traded in the country. Companies are not required to have a third party audit their reserve data, according to rules posted on the SEC website.

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