He also said the world needs to focus on reducing greenhouse gas emissions rather than replacing one form of energy with another, stressing that major investments were needed in all energy sectors, Reuters reported.
“That is the truth that needs to be spoken,” Al Ghais told at the Middle East Petroleum and Gas Conference in Dubai.
OPEC estimates that the world needs $12.1 trillion in investments to meet rising oil demand in the long term.
With global oil demand growth at around eight million barrels per day (bpd), the world could face a supply problem as Western sanctions on Russian oil curtail production growth, Fereidun Fesharaki, chairman of the FGE Consultancy, said at the same event.
Russia can maintain production at around ten to 11 million bpd but two million bpd of future growth are unlikely to go ahead with sanctions in place, he said.
Russian oil and gas is subject to a range of Western sanctions aimed at limiting sales to the West and capping prices for Russian oil.
Fesharaki also said he saw OPEC behaving in a very different way than it used to with US shale oil growth no longer a worry with higher prices.
OPEC has instead shifted its focus to monetising oil resources before demand peaks.
Fesharaki said he saw “a desire to keep oil prices above $80 a barrel and a willingness to go over $100 if the market tightens”.
OPEC and its allies, led by Russia, known as OPEC+, agreed to cut production in late 2022 to support the market as the economic outlook worsened, hitting prices.
Then in a surprise move in April, Saudi Arabia and other OPEC+ members announced further oil output cuts of around 1.2 million barrels per day.
OPEC+ members are set to meet in Vienna on June 4 to decide on their next course of action.
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