1. Qatar Hopes To Start First NFE Train In 3Q 2026

    ...cility’s imminent start-up. The project has been in the works for more than a decade, after Qatar decided in 2014 to convert its Golden Pass import terminal into an export terminal due to the surge in US gas production (MEES, 11 July 2014). Beyond adding 23% to QatarEnergy’s current LNG capacity, it wi...

    Volume: 68
    Issue: 50
    Published at Fri, 12 Dec 2025
  2. Saudi Arabia Prioritizes Investment Despite Budget Deficits

    ...rging by $34.5bn to a five-year high of $65.3bn, preliminary Ministry of Finance figures show (see table). This is more than double the originally budgeted figure of $26.9bn. Having run just one budget surplus since 2014, government debt levels have been on the rise in recent years. From just $38bn in...

    Volume: 68
    Issue: 49
    Published at Fri, 05 Dec 2025
  3. Israel-Egypt Gas Flows Top 1bn Cfd For November, Helping Cairo Cut LNG Imports

    ...pplement gas, domestic output of which fell to a seven-year low 4.494bn cfd according to latest oil ministry stats (MEES, 6 December). Egypt burned an eight-year high 214,000 b/d of fuel oil in August and while it has dipped since, October’s 188,000 b/d was the highest for the month since 2014 (see ch...

    Volume: 67
    Issue: 51/52
    Published at Fri, 20 Dec 2024
  4. BP Agrees Technical Terms For Redevelopment Of Iraq’s Kirkuk

    ...lks fell apart in 2020 following a three-year study initially commissioned in 2013, which was interrupted by the rise of the Islamic State in 2014. Since then, Baghdad has revamped its contract models, launching a ‘profit sharing’ Development and Production Contract (DPC) model intended to provide fi...

    Volume: 67
    Issue: 51/52
    Published at Fri, 20 Dec 2024
  5. Egypt To List Military-Owned Companies for Sale In Renewed Privatization Drive

    ...power in 2014.   And just last week, the military-owned Mostakbal Misr Agency for Sustainable Development took over Egypt’s import of strategic commodities, according to a letter seen by Reuters. The agency replaces the state-owned General Authority for Supply Commodities (GASC), which has fo...

    Volume: 67
    Issue: 50
    Published at Fri, 13 Dec 2024
  6. UAE’s Wait To Tap Into Expanded Capacity Goes On

    ...r its flagship Murban crude export grade. The last time that Murban averaged more than that was 2014’s $99.45/B, when production of 2.78mn b/d was 270,000 b/d less than last year’s figure. With Murban prices set to drop to around $83/B this year, a sharp fall in revenue is inevitable for 2023. ME...

    Volume: 66
    Issue: 50
    Published at Fri, 15 Dec 2023
  7. Iran-Aligned Militia Attacks Complicate Delicate Iraqi-US Relations

    ...w system to importers and banks as opposed to black market dollars. Mr Sudani’s decision in January to reinstate Ali al-‘Alak as CBI Governor proved useful, given his long working relationship with his US peers between 2014 and 2020. But the recovery remains erratic and suboptimal, with li...

    Volume: 66
    Issue: 50
    Published at Fri, 15 Dec 2023
  8. Libya’s Legal Battle To Recover Billions In Overseas Assets

    ...bya (MEES, 13 October). Since 2014, the country has had two administrations, each with its own legislative and executive bodies. One is the internationally recognized Government of National Unity (GNU), based in the western capital of Tripoli and led by Prime Minister Abdelhamid Dbeibeh (MEES, 12 Ma...

    Volume: 66
    Issue: 50
    Published at Fri, 15 Dec 2023
  9. Kuwait’s Cabinet Looks Ahead To A Troublesome 2024

    ...ght consecutive budget deficits between 2014/15 and 2021/22 (see chart), but since September 2017 the government has been unable to raise debt to finance these deficits as parliament has repeatedly blocked the passage of a debt law to allow state borrowing. In September, Fitch affirmed Kuwait’s ‘AA-’ ra...

    Volume: 66
    Issue: 50
    Published at Fri, 15 Dec 2023
  10. Iran Plans Major Gas Storage Expansion To Face Winter Shortages

    ...orasan Razavi. The latter province borders Turkmenistan and Afghanistan (see map). Fully commissioned in 2014, the two facilities receive gas via pipeline from processing plants in summer, when demand is relatively low, injecting volumes into their reservoirs. Gas is then withdrawn in winter and sent vi...

    Volume: 66
    Issue: 49
    Published at Fri, 08 Dec 2023
  11. Jordan Looks To Climb On The Green Hydrogen Bandwagon

    ...ovided 27% of Jordan’s 2022 power, up from just 1% in 2014. But the ambitious plans face many challenges, including a severe water shortage. A 2019 Jordanian-German Energy Partnership said that despite Jordan’s “promising” potential for green hydrogen, including a “mature chemical industry” and ex...

    Volume: 66
    Issue: 49
    Published at Fri, 08 Dec 2023
  12. Libya Exploration Picks Up Steam As NOC Reiterates Ambitions

    ...13). Only two wells, of what had originally been planned as an 11-well campaign, were ultimately drilled. But though both saw “gas discoveries … in Devonian horizons,” the firm pulled out its staff and wrote off its entire to-date Libya exploration spend of $137mn as security deteriorated in early 2014...

    Volume: 66
    Issue: 48
    Published at Fri, 01 Dec 2023
  13. Yemen’s Breakthrough Truce Threatened By Houthi Military Attacks

    ...mbined cycle power plant. Yemen’s oil and gas sector had been declining since long before the onset of civil war. Production peaked in 2002 at 457,000 b/d with exports remaining above 100,000 b/d until 2014 (MEES, 15 September 2017). However, since the start of the conflict and the Saudi-led in...

    Volume: 66
    Issue: 48
    Published at Fri, 01 Dec 2023
  14. Algeria-Turkey LNG Deal

    ...-year extension inked in 2014. With output from the country’s own Sarkaya field in the Black Sea ramping up and Russia offering Ankara cut-price supplies for want of alternate markets, Turkey is evidently reluctant to commit to a longer-term contract for potentially more expensive oil-price-linked Al...

    Volume: 66
    Issue: 48
    Published at Fri, 01 Dec 2023
  15. Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala Cuts Energy Sector Exposure

    ...RMDOWN           The other major transaction this week involved Mubadala’s fully owned upstream subsidiary, Mubadala Energy (formerly Mubadala Petroleum). Mubadala Energy was led by Mr Kaabi between 2014 and 2017, and he has since remained chairman of the firm. The firm boosted its net output to a record 500,000 bo...

    Volume: 65
    Issue: 51/52
    Published at Fri, 23 Dec 2022
  16. Qatar Eyes Substantial $8bn Surplus For 2023

    ...r the World Cup, most notably opening a new airport in 2014 and a metro system in 2019, as well as greatly expanding its hospitality sector. Capex peaked at $28.2bn in 2016 but has been trending down as the tournament approached, and was $19.9bn in 2021. Minister of Finance Ali bin Ahmed al-Kuwari sa...

    Volume: 65
    Issue: 51/52
    Published at Fri, 23 Dec 2022
  17. Oman Achieves First Budget Surplus Since 2008

    ...n-hydrocarbon revenues of $8.36bn are also a record. Expenditure edged up this year to an estimated $33.99bn, from $32.25bn in 2021. But this was due to a $1.8bn increase in capital expenditure rather than an increase in subsidies or public sector wage bills. After ballooning to $39.4bn in 2014, Om...

    Volume: 65
    Issue: 51/52
    Published at Fri, 23 Dec 2022
  18. US Stocks At 37-Year Low But Repurchase Coming

    ...e start of the year. Whist the commercial stocks figure is little changed from 421mn barrels at the end of 2021 (though this was the lowest end-year figure since 2014), the SPR figure is down by a massive 215mn barrels (36%) on the start of the year for what would be the lowest end-year figure si...

    Volume: 65
    Issue: 51/52
    Published at Fri, 23 Dec 2022
  19. Saudi Arabia Increases 2023 Budget Expectations

    ....3bn, and to rise further to $41.9bn in 2023. These capex figures remain well below historic levels. Saudi capex peaked at $85.2bn in 2014 before being cut as oil prices dropped. But it was still running at $45.9bn in 2019 before the Covid-19 pandemic. The low planned capex figure for this year wa...

    Volume: 65
    Issue: 49
    Published at Fri, 09 Dec 2022
  20. Israel Upstream To Continue Growing In 2022 Despite Minister’s ‘Green’ Pledge

    ...lek consortium were the two bidders but the award is currently awaiting arbitration (MEES, 15 January). Energean argues that Chevron and Delek were excluded from bidding for blocks in Israel’s bid rounds following a 2014 antitrust ruling (MEES, 2 January 2015). KEY EAST MED  OFFSHORE FIELDS & IN...

    Volume: 64
    Issue: 51/52
    Published at Fri, 24 Dec 2021