logo
ADNOC deepens energy partnerships with US companies

ADNOC deepens energy partnerships with US companies

Al Etihad16-05-2025

16 May 2025 19:32
ABU DHABI (WAM)ADNOC on Friday announced multiple agreements with United States (US) energy majors during the United Arab Emirates (UAE)-US business dialogue with US President Donald J. Trump.The agreements will potentially enable $60 billion of US investments in UAE energy projects across the lifespan of the projects.The agreements include a landmark field development plan with ExxonMobil and INPEX/JODCO to expand the capacity of Abu Dhabi's Upper Zakum offshore field through a phased development.ADNOC also signed a strategic collaboration agreement with Occidental to explore increasing the production capacity of the Shah Gas field to 1.85 billion standard cubic feet per day (bscfd) of natural gas, from 1.45 bscfd, and accelerating the deployment of advanced technologies in the field.The agreements reinforce the shared commitment of the UAE and the US to maintaining global energy security and the stability of energy markets. The enterprise value of UAE energy investments in the US is set to reach $440 billion by 2035, as part of the UAE's $1.4 trillion investment plan in the country.Dr. Sultan Al Jaber, Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology, ADNOC Managing Director and Group CEO, said, 'The deep-rooted bilateral relationship between the UAE and the US is underpinned by our shared commitment to enabling energy abundance, and we are reinforcing this commitment through these agreements with US energy majors. We see significant opportunities for further UAE-US partnerships across the energy-AI nexus, and we look forward to working with our American partners to unlock long-term sustainable value and drive socioeconomic progress.'The US is a top priority market for XRG, ADNOC's global energy investment company, and the company is set to boost investments across the American energy value chain, focusing on expanding gas, LNG, speciality chemicals and energy infrastructure.Building on its ambitious investment plans for the US, XRG signed a framework agreement with Occidental subsidiary 1PointFive to evaluate a potential investment in a direct air capture (DAC) project in Kleberg County, Texas. The facility would remove up to 500,000 tons of CO₂ per year using commercial-scale DAC technology, with XRG considering a capital commitment of up to one-third of the project's total development cost.Abu Dhabi's Supreme Council for Financial and Economic Affairs (SCFEA) also granted a new unconventional oil exploration concession to EOG Resources Inc. (EOG), a leading US-based hydrocarbon exploration and production company. The award for Unconventional Onshore Block 3, which covers a 3,609 square kilometre area within the Al Dhafra region of Abu Dhabi, is the first award of its kind to a US company and underlines the attractiveness of Abu Dhabi's energy sector and its position as a trusted investment destination. ADNOC will oversee and assist with exploration activities in the concession and has the option to join a subsequent production concession.The phased field development plan for Upper Zakum will leverage AI and industry-leading technologies and the deep expertise and strong partnership between ADNOC, ExxonMobil and INPEX/JODCO to sustainably grow production capacity and help meet rising global demand with industry-leading low-carbon intensity barrels. Upper Zakum is part of the Zakum field, which is the world's second-largest offshore field.The plan will upgrade the Upper Zakum's infrastructure to include AI-enabled remote operations, receive power from the UAE's clean energy grid to reduce emissions, and enable the use of artificial islands for drilling activities to enhance environmental protection. Upper Zakum field is located 84 kilometres northwest of Abu Dhabi.
The Shah Gas field is one of the world's largest of its kind and is located 180 kilometres southwest of Abu Dhabi. The potential expansion of the facility will provide more gas for domestic industrial growth and liquefied natural gas (LNG) for export.
Trump's Middle East visit
Continue full coverage

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Republican Party's fiscal hawk era is officially over
The Republican Party's fiscal hawk era is officially over

Gulf Today

timean hour ago

  • Gulf Today

The Republican Party's fiscal hawk era is officially over

There is no constituency for debt reduction, which is a fancy way of saying voters don't care that the federal balance sheet is roughly $37 trillion in the red — and growing. This simple fact of American politics goes a long way toward explaining why President Donald Trump, with the help of congressional Republicans, is pushing a sweeping reconciliation package of tax cuts and fresh domestic spending priorities that is projected to add approximately $3.8 trillion to the swelling federal debt. Politics is a service business and Trump and his Capitol Hill allies are aiming to please the customer. So they've loaded up the reconciliation package, dubbed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, with a series of crowd-pleasers — expansions of existing tax breaks plus some brand-new ones. Yes, there are spending cuts. The version of the legislation that passed in the House of Representatives and is now up for consideration in the Senate includes reductions to Medicaid and other budget line items. But there's nothing in the bill that results in a net decrease in the debt. Even the proposed changes to Medicaid face an uncertain future, thanks to GOP opposition in the Senate. That's because the sort of substantial spending cuts and programme reforms required to break Washington's addiction to borrowing would be wildly unpopular. For instance, any meaningful attempt to balance the books probably requires both raising taxes and overhauling Medicare and Social Security. That's not a recipe for winning elections. As concerning as the US debt load is becoming for bond markets and some finance titans (and the few fiscal hawks left in Washington), most Americans have more urgent concerns, said David Winston, a Republican pollster who has been surveying voters for more than 25 years. 'There's another issue hitting voters that's a bigger deal, and that's inflation,' he told me. 'When you're looking at an economic situation where there's something that's pressing people at a personal level, it's not that the deficit isn't important, it is. But being able to pay bills and deal with things on a weekly basis and keep up with all your costs takes precedence.' Winston is right — and that's not to mention the fact that so many voters are convinced the looming debt bomb can be diffused by eliminating waste, fraud and abuse in government spending. But this isn't a new phenomenon. Voters generally, particularly on the left, have always found some reason or another for opposing legislation that asks them to participate in the solution to Washington's fiscal challenges. It's why tax hikes on the so-called rich are so popular and such an easy political message to wield. What has changed is the Republican Party and the voters it represents. Without question, Republican presidents prior to Trump were complicit in running up the debt. But in the pre-Trump era defined by President Ronald Reagan, fiscal responsibility and small government had currency with grassroots conservatives who formed the heart of the GOP base. But today's Republican base voters are different than their forebearers, courtesy of a Trump populist makeover. The 45th and 47th president over the past decade attracted legions of working-class voters to the Republican Party. For the most part, these newer Republicans are former Democrats who joined the GOP for cultural reasons; for instance, they passionately oppose abortion rights and support gun rights. Notably, they brought with them their preference for government safety-net programs and general lack of concern about the debt (qualities that have long defined grassroots Democrats). Simultaneously, suburban voters inclined to value fiscal responsibility generally, and debt reduction specifically, have drifted away from the GOP. The result is a Republican governing coalition much more enamored of government spending than it used to be and far less concerned about the federal debt, even though it has grown to more than 120% of the entire US economy — problematic to say the least. Brad Todd, a veteran Republican strategist in Washington and coauthor of The Great Revolt; Inside the Populist Coalition Reshaping American Politics, has closely monitored this electoral transformation. 'The voters who are additive to the coalition as a result of Donald Trump are voters who are not only comfortable with entitlements. They're wary of anybody that might cut them. One of the reasons these voters were not Republican for a long time is because they believed the Democrats' scare tactics on entitlements,' Todd told me. 'The realignment works both ways. Some of the voters Republicans have lost are upscale suburbanites who are fiscal conservatives.' 'Republicans tried to do privatised Social Security accounts; A to Z budgeting; baseline budgeting; line-item veto; balanced budget amendment,' he added. 'We've tried all those innovations, none of them resulted in winning elections. Culture does result in winning elections and so Donald Trump just came along and made the party about culture and not conservative economics.' David M. Drucker, Tribune News Service

Iran says no sanctions relief in US nuclear proposal
Iran says no sanctions relief in US nuclear proposal

Khaleej Times

time3 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

Iran says no sanctions relief in US nuclear proposal

Iran's parliament speaker said on Sunday that the latest US proposal for a nuclear deal does not include the lifting of sanctions, state media reported as negotiations appear to have hit a roadblock. The two foes have held five rounds of Omani-mediated talks since April, seeking to replace a landmark agreement between Tehran and world powers that set restrictions on Iran's nuclear activities in return for sanctions relief, before US President Donald Trump abandoned the accord during his first term in 2018. In a video aired on Iranian state TV, parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said that "the US plan does not even mention the lifting of sanctions". He called it a sign of dishonesty, accusing the Americans of seeking to impose a "unilateral" agreement that Tehran would not accept. "The delusional US president should know better and change his approach if he is really looking for a deal," Ghalibaf said. On May 31, after the fifth round of talks, Iran said it had received "elements" of a US proposal, with officials later taking issue with "ambiguities" in the draft text. The US and its Western allies have long accused the Islamic republic of seeking to acquire nuclear weapons, a charge Iran has consistently denied, insisting that its atomic programme was solely for peaceful purposes. Key issues in the negotiations have been the removal of biting economic sanctions and uranium enrichment. Tehran says it has the right to enrich uranium under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, while the Trump administration has called any Iranian enrichment a "red line". Trump, who has revived his "maximum pressure" campaign of sanction on Iran since taking office in January, has repeatedly said it will not be allowed any uranium enrichment under a potential deal. On Tuesday, Iran's top negotiator, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, said the country "will not ask anyone for permission to continue enriching uranium". According to the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Iran is the only non-nuclear-weapon state in the world that enriches uranium up to 60 percent -- still short of the 90 percent threshold needed for a nuclear warhead. Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Wednesday rejected the latest US proposal and said enrichment was "key" to Iran's nuclear programme. The IAEA Board of Governors is scheduled to meet in Vienna later this month and discuss Iran's nuclear activities.

Rising influx of super-rich spurs Dubai luxury property market surge
Rising influx of super-rich spurs Dubai luxury property market surge

Khaleej Times

time5 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

Rising influx of super-rich spurs Dubai luxury property market surge

Dubai's luxury real estate sector is enjoying a spectacular boom, turbocharged by a rising influx of global high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) relocating to the city. Among the most prominent beneficiaries of this surge are Sobha Realty, Emaar, Nakheel, Damac and Condor Developers. This trend underscores Dubai's transformation into a top destination for wealth migration and investment. A combination of tax-friendly policies, political stability, a world-class lifestyle, and high asset yields is attracting record numbers of international investors — particularly from Europe. In May, Dubai's real estate market continued to witness unprecedented growth, smashing records with Dh66.8 billion in sales, a 49.9 per cent surge from the previous year, according to fäm Properties. Despite concerns of a potential price correction, the market's fundamentals remain rock-solid, with an undersupply of office space and a steady influx of high-net-worth individuals driving sustained growth 'European investors are entering the market in large numbers, seeking stability, growth, and a low-tax environment. This has significantly bolstered sales and investment in projects like Golf Links 18,' said Vidhyadharan Sivaprasad, chairman and CEO of Condor Developers, whose flagship project, Golf Links 18 at Dubai Sports City, has already sold nearly 70 per cent of its premium golf-facing residences — even before completion. Set to be completed before Q1 2026, Golf Links 18 is a Dh300 million luxury residential development offering over 250 upscale units across a 47,000 square-foot plot. It boasts an impressive range of 18 premium lifestyle amenities including two infinity pools, a rooftop yoga deck, Sky Retreat, jacuzzi, open-air cinema, and fitness facilities such as a gymnasium, sauna, and steam rooms. The rapid uptake in sales reflects a broader pattern: Dubai's residential property market is seeing unprecedented demand from global elites. According to the Knight Frank Wealth Report, the UAE welcomed 7,200 new millionaires in 2024 alone, building on 4,700 in 2023 and 5,200 in 2022. As of December 2024, the country was home to approximately 130,500 dollar millionaires, ranking it as the 14th-largest wealth hub globally. Most of the inbound HNWIs came from India (31 per cent), followed by the Middle East (20 per cent), Russia and the CIS (14 per cent), and the UK and Europe (12 per cent). The typical non-GCC high-net-worth investor spends Dh134 million ($36.5 million) on Dubai property, either for residence or investment. Henley & Partners' 2024 Wealth Migration Report also names the UAE as the world's top destination for millionaire migration, with 6,700 new millionaires moving to Dubai last year alone. This influx is set to rise, with New World Wealth projecting a 39 per cent increase in the number of HNWIs in the UAE by 2026. Real estate remains the cornerstone of investment strategies for both wealthy individuals and families. 'Real estate continues to be a key asset class for UHNWIs. It provides long-term value, income generation, and capital preservation, especially in markets like Dubai,' notes the Knight Frank report. According to Sivaprasad, these trends have directly contributed to the significant increase in both asset values and rental yields across the emirate. 'We've seen property asset values rise by 20 to 30 per cent in the last year, depending on location. Rental yields are strong, averaging around 10 per cent,' he said. European buyers now form the majority of purchasers at Golf Links 18, led by investors from the UK, Russia, France, Slovakia, and the UAE. Many are relocating from countries with high taxes and cumbersome fiscal regimes, drawn by the UAE's business-friendly ecosystem and simple, low-tax regulations. 'The demographic of our buyers is rapidly diversifying,' Sivaprasad added. 'Dubai's global appeal, combined with strategic government initiatives, has reshaped the real estate landscape. It's no longer just a regional market — it's a global destination for wealth.' Condor Developers is poised to expand aggressively. With a project pipeline worth Dh2.5 billion across Dubai Islands, Al Majan, and Jumeirah Village, the company is gearing up to meet the continued demand from the rising tide of international investors, he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store