Saudi Energy Minister Calls for Affordable Energy Supply at G20 Meeting

Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdel Abdulaziz bin Salman. (SPA)
Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdel Abdulaziz bin Salman. (SPA)
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Saudi Energy Minister Calls for Affordable Energy Supply at G20 Meeting

Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdel Abdulaziz bin Salman. (SPA)
Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdel Abdulaziz bin Salman. (SPA)

Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdel Abdulaziz bin Salman told a conference of the G20 group of the world’s largest economies on Friday that ensuring affordable energy supply is key to facilitating a global economic recovery.

“Having affordable, reliable, accessible energy supply is considered a necessity to enable basic services, including health care, and help our efforts in assisting economic recovery,” he said in an opening speech to a video-conference of the G20 energy ministers.

Saudi Arabia is currently the chair of the group.

Riyadh, Moscow and its allies, which make up the informal OPEC+ group, had forged a pact to curb crude production by the equivalent of 10% of global supplies in marathon talks on Thursday and said they wanted others to cut a further 5%.

But efforts to conclude the OPEC+ deal hit the buffers when Mexico refused to sign up in full.

The OPEC+ pact, if Mexico signs up, would see 10 million barrels per day (bpd) of oil removed, with an additional 5 million bpd withdrawn if the United States and others joined. Norway and Canada, both outside OPEC+, have indicated they could cut.



Turkish Inflation Falls to 35.4% in May, Below Forecast 

People on a ferry cross the Bosphorus backdropped by the Galata Tower during sunset in Istanbul, Türkiye, 28 May 2025. (EPA)
People on a ferry cross the Bosphorus backdropped by the Galata Tower during sunset in Istanbul, Türkiye, 28 May 2025. (EPA)
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Turkish Inflation Falls to 35.4% in May, Below Forecast 

People on a ferry cross the Bosphorus backdropped by the Galata Tower during sunset in Istanbul, Türkiye, 28 May 2025. (EPA)
People on a ferry cross the Bosphorus backdropped by the Galata Tower during sunset in Istanbul, Türkiye, 28 May 2025. (EPA)

Turkish annual inflation dipped to 35.41% in May, official data showed on Tuesday, below a Reuters poll forecast and less than half the level of more than 75% that it reached a year earlier.

Month-on-month, consumer price inflation was 1.53%, the Turkish Statistical Institute said, also below forecasts. In April, inflation stood at 3.0% on a monthly basis and 37.86% annually.

In a Reuters poll, the monthly inflation rate was expected to be 2.0% in May, with the annual rate seen at 36.1%.

Annual increases were led by education prices, which were up 71.67% on the year, while housing prices climbed 67.43%. Food and non-alcoholic drinks prices rose 32.87%.

Inflation is seen at around 30% by end-2025, the poll showed, above a central bank forecast of 24%. Economists have revised up year-end inflation forecasts since March despite the central bank's recent tightening steps.

In March, Turkish assets suffered, with the lira touching a record low against the US dollar after Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu - President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's chief political rival - was jailed pending trial over graft charges that he denies.

The domestic producer price index rose 2.48% month-on-month in May for an annual rise of 23.13%, the data showed.