UAE’s ADNOC bets on gas with approval of low-carbon Ruwais LNG project

Anthony Di Paola, Bloomberg June 12, 2024

(Bloomberg) – The United Arab Emirates’s biggest energy company approved a major liquefied natural gas export (LNG) terminal as it seeks to tap into a growing global market for the fuel.

The decision to go ahead with the facility is the latest sign of Adnoc’s ambition to expand in the market globally. (Photographer: Christopher Pike/Bloomberg)

Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. (Adnoc) made the final investment decision to build the LNG plant in the industrial city of Ruwais, according to a statement. The project will add 9.6 million tons of annual gas export capacity and more than double Adnoc’s production capability.

The company has so far relied on its own funds to build the project and on Wednesday awarded a $5.5 billion engineering and construction contract for the facility to a joint venture which comprises Technip Energies NV, JGC Holdings Corp. and NMDC Energy.

The decision to go ahead with the facility is the latest sign of the state company’s ambition to expand in the market globally, following recent deals for LNG projects in the U.S. and Mozambique. Adnoc has signed some sales deals with Asian and European companies for supply from the project starting in 2028, though is yet to find buyers for all the gas.

The UAE, the oil-rich state of which Abu Dhabi is the capital, aims to boost gas output to become self-sufficient in the fuel by the end of the decade. It’s looking to take advantage of gas’s role as a bridge fuel in the energy transition.

The new Ruwais project will compete with vast amounts of supply from Qatar. The tiny country in the Gulf is already one of the world’s biggest producers of the fuel and is expanding capacity to 126 million tons a year by 2027 from 77 million. It plans to push it further to 142 million tons by the end of the decade.

Saudi Arabia is also bolstering its gas business, with government-owned Aramco boosting production at home, buying into LNG projects in Australia and seeking assets in the U.S. All three Gulf states are expanding their trading arms to maximize profit from selling gas.

Adnoc already has 6 million tons of LNG capacity at Das Island, a facility that began operations in 1977. Bloomberg News reported in March that Adnoc planned to make the final investment decision on Ruwais LNG as early as June.

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