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by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it  on Wednesday, 04 November 2009

The state of play in the region’s most dynamic upstream market.

The United Arab Emirates derives the overwhelming majority of its State revenues from the rich oil and gas reserves which sit beneath the Emirates. Of course, strictly speaking, the lion’s share of that is concentrated in Abu Dhabi, the capital city and production hub.

However, a good number of the support and service industries that dot the Fujairah and Sharjah coasts, and the massive enterprises nestled into the booming Freezones of Dubai can attribute their success to those reserves too.


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The UAE has managed to deliver business and enterprise throughout the country from that oil and gas base in a much more successful way than many of its neighbours. Whilst chinks have appeared in the armour in 2009, the successful diversification programmes it has embarked upon, including aluminium manufacture, petrochemical production and its hard-won status as a genuine logistical hub for the region, all remain solid and viable business ventures, and will remain so for decades more.

Overview

Oil and gas production has been the mainstay of the economy in the UAE and will remain a major revenue earner long into the future. Proven recoverable oil reserves are estimated in the 97 to 98 billion barrels range, depending on where you look. This equates to a phenomenal 9.5% of the global crude oil proven reserves.

As for natural gas, the proven recoverable reserves are estimated at around 214 trillion cubic feet (Tcf). The small Gulf nation holds the fourth largest proven natural gas reserves in the Middle East after Iran, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia. As with oil, the largest reserves of 198.5 Tcf are located in Abu Dhabi. UAE government sources estimate that such reserves, at current production will, excluding any new discoveries, last for over 150 years.

The UAE ’s oil production is limited by quotas agreed within the framework of OPEC to 2.25 million barrels per day (mbd). Production capacity, however, is slated to rise to approximately 5 million bpd by 2014, though the impact of current OPEC quotas and sluggish global demand recovery may see those plans strategically slowed.

Japan is a major trade partner for the UAE, and in 2008 Japan imported 369.2 million barrels of crude oil from the UAE, covering 25.1 per cent of Japan’s total crude oil imports.

The big question of course is what projects and developments are in the pipeline over the course of the next decade? Information from a variety of government sources has been compiled and digested in the following snapshots. For detailed coverage and analysis of the UAE’s major oil and gas projects and plans, and a special report on the ADNOC group of companies, please viist our sister website ArabianOilandGas.com.

$43 billion portfolio

Turning to the future, upstream oil and gas entities in the UAE continue to identify new projects aimed at boosting the nation’s crude oil production capacity to nearly 4 million barrels per day by 2020, which would amount to an additional increase of approximately 40 percent over current production levels.

Reaching this ambitious target will represent a massive undertaking of resources and investment, particularly in light of persistent manpower and materials shortages that have afflicted the global oil and gas sector since 2003. The UAE has invested roughly $7 billion in upstream production infrastructure since 2004 and anticipates investing some $43 billion more in the coming years. At the same time, the UAE will invest more than $6 billion to expand its domestic refining capacity, which will significantly expand its ability to export refined products from the region.


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