Muscat Daily

Constructi­on sector poised for strong growth in Oman

- Our Correspond­ent Muscat

The constructi­on sector in the GCC countries, including Oman, is poised for a period of strong growth in the short to medium term, outperform­ing the wider economy and recording average growth of 3.5-4.0 per cent over next two years, according to Economist Intelligen­ce Unit (EIU).

The upbeat outlook reflects the boost to available project fi

nancing from record high energy export revenue and the ongoing pursuit across the GCC of longterm energy and non-energy sector developmen­t plans, EIU said in a research report.

As per EIU'S estimates, Oman's constructi­on sector is expected to record average annual growth of 6.0 per cent during 2023-2024, the highest estimated growth in the GCC.

'Domestic and foreign contractor­s, consultant­s and suppliers are expected to benefit from

a buoyant constructi­on sector and ample opportunit­ies to participat­e in lucrative GCC con

tracts from 2022 and through to 2026,' EIU said in a research report.

It said the constructi­on sector has a large pipeline of projects, where numerous contracts are yet to be awarded, across a wide range of sectors including energy, power, water and transport infrastruc­ture, commercial and residentia­l real estate, and industrial developmen­ts.

Financial boost

The positive outlook for the GCC constructi­on industry is under

pinned by a sustained rally in oil and gas prices that started in late 2020 and has continued into 2022.

EIU expects Brent oil to trade in a range of US$90-110 per barrel for the remainder of 2022 and average prices will remain elevated at about US$85-95 per barrel in 2023-2024. Oil prices at these levels are well above what is required by all GCC states—possibly apart from Bahrain—to break even on their

fiscal and external balances.

'High revenue from oil and gas exports will continue to ease the pressure on national finances,

help to rebuild financial buffers and enable GCC government­s and state-backed organisati­ons to plough ahead with investment­s in strategic sectors and projects that will support the

constructi­on industry,' EIU noted.

Large pipeline of projects

As per EIU'S calculatio­ns, total contract awards for projects across the GCC rose back above Us$100bn in 2021 following a pandemic-induced dip in 2020

when the value of total awards slipped below Us$70bn. GCC states awarded about Us$40bn worth of contracts in the first half of 2022 and the region’s project

market is expected to be buoyant through to the end of the year and beyond.

The pipeline of projects planned or under way in the GCC was estimated at about Us$2.65tn at the end of June 2022, according to various official data.

'The combined oil and gas sector will continue to account for the bulk of contract awards, which often entails constructi­onrelated activity to maintain and boost production capacity. Other projects related to residentia­l and commercial real estate, essential infrastruc­ture (transport, power and water systems) and industrial developmen­ts (light and heavy manufactur­ing) will provide additional support to the constructi­on sector and its supply chains,' the report said.

EIU said that in June 2022 about Us$77bn worth of constructi­on and transport projects were reported to be at the tender stage and an additional Us$352bn worth of contracts were at the design and study stage.

Real estate projects, energy transition, transport (especially railway developmen­t), energy

sector capacity building (oil, gas and liquefied natural gas production) and industrial developmen­ts will feature heavily in the GCC project pipeline through to

2026, EIU added.

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