Bandar Al-khorayef, Saudi minister of industry and mineral resources, made the comments as the two countries have moved closer despite an escalating rivalry between China and the US, Saudi Arabia’s traditional ally.
“The petroyuan is not substantial to [the ministry], we believe Saudi Arabia will do what’s in its best interest … but I think Saudi Arabia will always try new things, and is open to new ideas, and we try not to mix politics with commerce,” Khorayef said in an interview on Saturday in Hong Kong.
Broader adoption of the petroyuan – shorthand for the use of China’s currency in cross-border crude oil settlements – is widely viewed as the next step for the yuan’s internationalisation, and a challenge to the omnipresent US dollar in global commodity markets.
The currency’s use has grown – alongside trade with Russia, China’s largest source of crude imports – after Moscow was locked out of the US dollar system following its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.