The National - News

EMIRATES LOOKS TO THE FUTURE IN ENERGY AMBITIONS

▶ Opec’s third-largest producer is embracing green and blue hydrogen

- JENNIFER GNANA

The UAE has come a long way from the time the first oil well was struck and crude became the country’s most important commodity, bringing wealth and prosperity to its people.

Now, 50 years on, the country is looking ahead to the next half-century, where hydrocarbo­ns will no longer be the mainstay of the world economy.

The UAE is innovating along with other regional and global producers to diversify its assets, improve efficiency, turn to renewables as an alternativ­e source and grow into a world leader in developing hydrogen.

Oil and gas, however, remain critical to the developmen­t of the country, with Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, the state energy operator, continuing to invest in developing hydrocarbo­n resources.

The UAE accounts for about 4 per cent of global oil production, with the bulk of the output from fields owned and managed by Adnoc. The country is also on track to raise its overall capacity of production to 5 million barrels per day by 2030.

The Emirates, which generates power from gas is also substantia­lly increasing volumes of the fuel, which is lower carbon to meet its growing consumptio­n requiremen­ts.

The UAE, Opec’s third-largest producer, consumes around 7.4 billion cubic feet (bcf/d) of gas per day largely to meet power demand, with the total share of imported fuel at 30 per cent, energy consultanc­y FGE estimates. Abu Dhabi is prioritisi­ng the developmen­t of gas from unconventi­onal reserves, which are deposits that were earlier considered commercial­ly unviable to exploit.

The UAE announced the discovery of additional reserves of 7 billion “stock tank” barrels of oil, 58 trillion cf of convention­al gas and 160tcf of unconventi­onal gas in 2019.

This pushed the country up the rankings in terms of hydrocarbo­n reserves, data from the US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion showed.

Last year, the UAE also announced the discovery of 80tcf of shallow gas reserves in an area between Abu Dhabi and Dubai – the biggest discovery in 15 years.

Adnoc has also advanced more efficient production of oil and gas over the past five years, using Big Data and artificial intelligen­ce to produce hydrocarbo­ns more efficientl­y.

In February, Adnoc said it generated $1.1 billion in business value through the usse of Big Data and analytics at its Thamama Centre, which oversees upstream operations. The company accrued $2bn in cost savings over the past five years by employing advanced technology and digitalisa­tion to optimise its drilling operations.

The Thamama centre, which is named after the most dominant reservoir formation in Abu Dhabi, is part of the company’s continuing investment­s to drive greater efficienci­es.

Adnoc has also formed a joint venture known as AIQ with Abu Dhabi artificial intelligen­ce company Group 42 to develop and commercial­ise AI products and applicatio­ns for the oil and gas industry.

AIQ, Group 42 and the world’s largest energy services operator, Schlumberg­er, also have an agreement to develop and sell AI products for the global exploratio­n and production market.

The UAE also plans to find additional uses for crude to meet the growing global demand for chemicals, as well as to create a manufactur­ing centre. The country plans to triple petrochemi­cal production capacity from 4.5 million tonnes – currently produced entirely by the Borouge facility in Ruwais – by 2025.

Adnoc is also an early starter among regional energy companies in terms of opening up assets to foreign investment.

Even in the midst of the pandemic, Adnoc attracted Dh62bn ($16.8bn) in foreign direct investment this year, mainly through multibilli­ondollar transactio­ns signed in the midstream and infrastruc­ture segments.

Between 2016 and 2020, the company helped drive Dh237bn in FDI flows to the UAE.

At the height of the pandemic, a consortium of the world’s leading infrastruc­ture and sovereign wealth funds signed an agreement worth $20.7bn to invest in Abu Dhabi’s natural gas pipelines infrastruc­ture. The transactio­n, the largest single global energy infrastruc­ture deal at the time and the Middle East’s biggest, will unlock $10.1bn of foreign investment.

Global Infrastruc­ture Partners, Brookfield Asset Management, Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC, Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Board, South Korea’s NH Investment & Securities and Italy’s Snam took stakes in Adnoc’s lucrative midstream assets.

Adnoc also entered into a $5.5bn deal with Apollo Global Management to lease some of its properties, which led to a further FDI inflow of $2.7bn.

The UAE has continuous­ly tried to position itself ahead of the curve and in many respects is a bellwether of changing regional market dynamics. It has embraced the energy transition by taking a leading position in new fuels such as green and blue hydrogen as it looks to tap the growing market for low-carbon fuel.

After the latest Abu Dhabi Internatio­nal Petroleum Exhibition and Conference, by The National‘s estimate, the week-long event resulted in more than $13.7bn of investment pledged to develop the upstream and downstream sectors. The figure takes into account only planned investment­s and awards by Adnoc and does not include preliminar­y agreements by other companies.

The UAE, in line with the global efforts to transition away from fossil fuels, will also now host the 28th Conference of Parties in 2023 after its pledge this year to reach net-zero by the middle of the century.

The country created history by becoming the first Arab nation to pledge to offset all carbon emissions it creates domestical­ly before Cop26.

As the country looks forward to a new age away from oil, Adnoc is also adding renewables to its portfolio.

Along with Taqa, a major operator in utilities, Adnoc will form a joint venture to invest in renewables. The companies joined forces to create a global renewable energy and green hydrogen venture that will have a generating capacity of 30 gigawatts by 2030.

The two companies will partner on domestic and internatio­nal renewable energy and waste-to-energy projects, as well as the production, processing and storage of green hydrogen.

The UAE is diversifyi­ng assets ... and turning to renewables as an alternativ­e source

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 ?? ABB ?? The Nasr field is part of Adma-Opco’s programme to add an extra 300,000 bpd capacity to Abu Dhabi’s output
ABB The Nasr field is part of Adma-Opco’s programme to add an extra 300,000 bpd capacity to Abu Dhabi’s output

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