
UAE Secures Dominant Role in Azerbaijan Gulf Trade
UAE's new Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement with Azerbaijan has catapulted bilateral non‑oil trade to unprecedented levels, now accounting for half of Azerbaijan's commerce with Gulf Cooperation Council countries. This landmark pact promises to mould economic trajectories for both nations by 2031.
Dr Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi, UAE Minister of Foreign Trade, revealed that non‑oil trade surged by 36.2 percent in 2024, reaching US $2.24 billion—equivalent to 50 percent of Azerbaijan's trade with the GCC. This accomplishment is underpinned by a robust 4.1 percent expansion in Azerbaijan's overall GDP and a 6.3 percent rise in its non‑oil sector.
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Signed in Abu Dhabi with the presence of UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, CEPA is expected to inject US $680 million into UAE GDP and US $300 million into Azerbaijan by 2031. It further cements the UAE's status as Azerbaijan's top Arab investor, with cumulative UAE investments now exceeding US $1 billion.
The CEPA supports strategic priorities in manufacturing, automotive, agriculture, logistics, and financial services, with planned expansion of UAE investments in energy and renewables via state-owned giants ADNOC and Masdar. Masdar's portfolio in Azerbaijan is set to exceed 1.2 GW by 2027 following a 4 GW renewables agreement including solar and hydrogen projects.
This accord also aligns with broader UAE ambitions under its CEPA programme, aimed at achieving US $1.1 trillion in non‑oil trade by 2031. Already, the initiative delivered a record US $816 billion in 2024, marking a 14.6 percent year-on-year increase, and positions the UAE as having 27 CEPA agreements with markets comprising over one‑quarter of global population.
Beyond trade figures, CEPA signifies a strategic push to diversify UAE exports and deepen supply‑chain resilience. It enables Azerbaijani goods access to Gulf and global markets, while encouraging UAE capital deployment in Eastern Europe via Azerbaijan's Gateway logistics advantage. Sectors like food security, real estate, and logistics are flagged for development across both economies.
Financial cooperation is gaining momentum too. Talks between Azerbaijan's Central Bank and Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange may lay groundwork for capital-market linkages. Additionally, Azerbaijani remittances to UAE saw a 52.1 percent rise in Q1 2025, reaching US $18.8 million.
Humanitarian and environmental collaboration with CEPA includes UAE support for demining through Azerbaijan's Mine Action Agency and joint efforts during COP summits.
CEPA is poised to enrich private‑sector ties, particularly for SMEs, while also strengthening tourism links—highlighted by over 185 monthly flights connecting the UAE and Azerbaijan. Earlier cooperation has boosted non‑oil trade 43 percent in 2024 to about US $2.4 billion.
In the energy domain, strategic joint ventures have been flourishing. ADNOC holds a 30 percent stake in Azerbaijan's Absheron project, and SOCAR reciprocated with oil‑field stakes in UAE territory. Renewable efforts include a 445 MW solar plant in Bilasuvar and a 315 MW installation in Neftchala under Saudi-UAE investment.
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