Business | Oil & Gas
Saudis nominate Al Moneef as Opec chief
Current secretary-general Al Badri ends term at end of year
Riyadh: Saudi Arabia nominated its Opec (Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries) governor, Majid Al Moneef, as a candidate for secretary-general of the oil-producer group, a person with knowledge of the matter said.
Opec's current secretary-general, Libya's Abdullah Al Badri, will end his second three-year term at the end of this year, after first taking over the post on January 1, 2007. Al Moneef would be replaced in his current post by Yasser Al Mufdi, who works at the Saudi Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources, the person said, declining to be identified because the change hasn't been made public.
The ministry's media adviser was unavailable for comment.
Al Mufdi was Saudi Arabia's Opec national representative from 2003 to 2009 and was most recently manager of the long-range planning department at Saudi Arabian Oil Co, the state-run oil company known as Saudi Aramco.
Each of Opec's 12 member nations appoints a governor and a national representative to the group. The governor sits on Opec's board, helping to manage the organisation and its annual budget, while the representative's duties include analysing the oil market.
Business Editor's choice
-
China breaks West's solar monopoly
Some countries in the world, especially Germany and the United States, have made considerable efforts to invest in developing solar energy cells
-
Burberry store spree will cut profit
Trenchcoat maker forges ahead with investment strategy targeting emerging markets
-
Laws needed to spur region bond markets
UAE Central Bank calls for creation of a centralised Sharia board to facilitate the sale of sukuk

