Cheap Oil Slows Saudi, UAE Projects But Qatar, Kuwait Rise -ADCB
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Cheap Oil Slows Saudi, UAE Projects But Qatar, Kuwait Rise -ADCB

Cheap Oil Slows Saudi, UAE Projects But Qatar, Kuwait Rise -ADCB

The total value of projects awarded in the GCC climbed to above $40 billion in Q1 2015.

Gulf Business

Low oil prices are slowing new economic projects in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates but project awards have accelerated in Qatar and Kuwait, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank said on Thursday in a report showing the mixed impact of cheap oil on the Gulf.

The total value of projects awarded in the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council climbed to above $40 billion in the first quarter of this year, up 9.9 per cent from the previous quarter. That amount was the largest since the second quarter of 2014, and above the average of the last two years.

The report confirmed that the Gulf projects market has by no means collapsed because of the plunge of oil prices since last June, even though state finances in the GCC countries have been hurt by reduced oil and gas export income.

ADCB said it expected the GCC projects market to continue growing in 2015, although at a weaker pace than in 2013 and 2014, which were particularly strong years.

However, “much will depend on the recovery of the oil price,” the bank said, adding: “Private corporate investors are generally taking a more wait-and-see approach to projects than governments are.”

The value of projects awarded in Saudi Arabia during the first quarter of this year fell 10 per cent from the previous quarter, ADCB said. New projects focused on social welfare, with major awards made in healthcare and housing.

The main Saudi project cancellations were in the hydrocarbon sector, but the impact of low oil prices is likely to increase in the rest of this year, ADCB said, noting that some private real estate and industrial projects had been put on hold.

Project awards in the United Arab Emirates sank 35.6 per cent in the first quarter to their lowest level since the beginning of 2013.

Around 40 per cent of planned construction projects by value were put on hold, though this amount was dominated by a single private real estate project in the emirate of Ras al-Khaimah, and ADCB said it believed most of the UAE’s core development plans were largely on track.

The value of new projects in Qatar soared 287 per cent, largely because of construction of the Doha Metro. Kuwait also rose, but this was mostly because of a single large oil project.

Unlike their wealthy GCC neighbours, which have huge fiscal reserves, the finances of Oman and Bahrain have been hit hard by low oil prices. The value of first-quarter project awards fell in both countries, ADCB’s report found.


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