Saudi Arabia Defers $1.2 Billion Oil Payment for Pakistan

Pakistan signs deal with Saudi Fund to defer $1.2 Billion oil payment, securing supply amid economic challenges. [Image via Oil Price]

Pakistan has signed an agreement with the Saudi Fund for Development to defer a $1.2 billion payment on the country’s oil imports by one year, the office of Pakistan’s prime minister said on Monday. “This project will strengthen Pakistan’s economic resilience by securing a stable supply of petroleum products while reducing immediate fiscal burdens,” Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s office said when welcoming the signing of the oil import financing facility.

Pakistan has been experiencing an economic crisis since 2022, characterized by high inflation, high debt, job cuts, and a struggling fiscal position. At some point the country was facing a severe shortage of foreign exchange reserves and risked defaulting on its debt obligations. Three years ago, Pakistan set a target for cheap Russian crude to make up two-thirds of its oil imports, but has been unable to achieve it hampered by a shortage of foreign currency and limitations at its refineries and ports. The cash-strapped South Asian nation became Russia’s latest customer after Russia started offering discounted urals following sanctions by the west.

Also See: Pakistan Trying to Get IsDB Financing, Revive Saudi Oil Facility

Previously, Pakistan’s petroleum minister Musadik Malik revealed that the country paid for its first imports of Russian crude in Chinese currency. According to Malik, the purchase, the first government-to-government (G2G) deal between Pakistan and Russia, consisted of 100,000 tonnes of crude. The decision to pay in Chinese currency instead of the traditional U.S. dollar comes after Russia said it will no longer accept the American currency as payment for its energy commodities but will instead switch to Chinese and Emirati currencies. Further, Russia was cut off from the US dollar-dominated global payments systems following sweeping sanctions off the Ukraine war.

Adding to the challenges, Pakistan pays significantly higher transport fees for Russian crude not only because of the longer distance traveled, but also because its ports are unable to handle the large vessels departing Russia. Still, Pakistan prefers Russian crude to oil from Saudi Arabia because Saudi Arab Light crude is $10 to $11 per barrel more expensive for Pakistani refiners than Urals.

This news is sourced from Oil Price and is intended for informational purposes only.

News Desk

Your trusted source for insightful journalism. Stay informed with our compelling coverage of global affairs, business, technology, and more.

Recent

The Tragedy of the Boat: Awami League’s Rise and Fall

The Tragedy of the Boat: Awami League’s Rise and Fall

The rise and fall of the Awami League is a story of nationalism turned inward, power hardened into authoritarianism, and a political movement ultimately consumed by the very forces it once harnessed. From its separatist origins in the 1960s to the iron-fisted rule of Sheikh Hasina, the party’s arc ends with an extraordinary reversal: the International Crimes Tribunal sentencing Hasina to death in absentia. The party that delivered independence now stands condemned, morally, legally, and historically, under the weight of its own contradictions and its fateful overreliance on India.

Read More »
Afghanistan: the question of Pakistan’s complaints

Afghanistan: The Question of Pakistan’s Complaints

Taliban’s acting Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi asked why only Pakistan complains about terrorism in Afghanistan. The truth is clear; Pakistan bears the heaviest burden. Since 2021, the Taliban regime has turned Afghanistan into a hub of terror and oppression, leaving Pakistan to face staggering human, economic, and security costs while the world watches.

Read More »
Narrative by Design: Al Jazeera’s Editorial Tilt on the Pakistan–TTP Conflict

Narrative by Design: Al Jazeera’s Editorial Tilt on the Pakistan–TTP Conflict

Al Jazeera’s reputation for alternative journalism contrasts sharply with its recent reporting on Pakistan’s conflict with the TTP and tensions with the Afghan Taliban. A close review shows consistent editorial choices that soften the Taliban’s image, reframe terrorist violence as resistance, and cast Pakistan’s counter-terrorism actions as aggression—ultimately reshaping the narrative in Kabul’s favour.

Read More »
Modern Platforms, Evolving Doctrine

Modern Platforms, Evolving Doctrine

The Gulf’s air-power evolution is increasingly shaped by the fusion of advanced platforms with modern doctrine and faster decision cycles. As regional forces adapt to complex threat environments, partners like Pakistan, whose operational experience spans multiple domains, are becoming part of the broader conversation on future air-power thinking.

Read More »