How are energy projects being financed? Large-scale projects - whether they’re gas processing facilities, extraction of hydrocarbons or the development of wind and solar - usually run into the billions.

The development of such large facilities requires a massive amount of capital upfront. During the Pennsylvania oil boom of the late 1800s, steely-minded entrepreneurs such as John D Rockefeller and Henry Flagler used their own equity but also borrowed heavily from banks to finance the early start-up of the US oil industry. Big Oil companies would eventually grow to their size and scale by tapping their cashflows for investment and accessing bank credit.

National oil companies, particularly in the Middle East, have largely been self-funded. However, with the volatility in the oil markets and changes in consumption patterns, state oil companies are increasingly monetising parts of their business. Renewable energy projects are also seeking private credit and new ways of accessing capital.

This week, I take a look at how some critical energy projects in the region are being built.


Last week saw a few major deals in the region. Abu Dhabi National Oil Company raised $11 billion in structured financing from a consortium of 20 banks to develop gas processing facilities for its Hail and Ghasha concessions. The company will use the “pre-finance” amount to help construct facilities that will be used to process the ultra sour gas, which is expected to come online by the end of the decade. Hail and Ghasha are developed by Adnoc with its partners - Italy’s Eni and Thailand’s PTT. Russia’s Lukoil, which was one of the upstream stakeholders, exited the concession in November.

What does this financing model do?

It shifts repayment responsibility off Adnoc, Eni and PTT’s balance sheets, with the liability sitting entirely with the project.

Are the funds available immediately then?

According to sources close to the project, the funds will be available in “staggered phases” from the financiers, who also include Chinese banks


Adnoc also secured $2 billion for low-carbon energy projects from South Korea’s export credit agency last week. Asian investors including Japan Bank for International Co-operation have contributed to $5 billion in green financing to help Adnoc progress projects that will lower its carbon emissions.

ACWA Power, Saudi Arabia’s power developer, also secured an unspecified amount for a desalination project from KKR last week. It marked the asset manager’s first foray into the kingdom. Alterra, the UAE’s $30 billion climate fund, is meanwhile investing in a fund managed by Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners to support the global expansion of renewable energy.


Meanwhile, Libya is inviting foreign companies to invest millions of dollars in greenfield projects to help raise production capacity stalled due to years of fractious politics. An Opec member, Libya is opening its oilfields to new investment for the first time in more than 17 years, aiming to raise output to 2 million barrels per day by 2030 from about 1.4 million bpd.

Who has qualified?

International oil companies, including BP, Chevron, ExxonMobil, TotalEnergies, Eni, Shell and OMV, have qualified for a new licensing round covering 22 oil exploration and development areas, split evenly between offshore and onshore blocks.

What can we expect?

“It’s reasonable to expect several hundred million to be committed in the round, higher if companies bid up offshore blocks,” Martijn Murphy, principal analyst for North Africa Upstream at Wood Mackenzie, told my colleague Fareed Rahman.


Non-recourse financing: In which lenders are paid directly from the project's cash flow and not from the balance sheet of concession operators.


US holiday makers are in for a treat as US petrol prices fell to the lowest so far this year on Monday. Petrol prices have remained below $3 per gallon this month.


Big Oil has its first female chief executive. Meg O’Neill will become the first woman to lead one of the world’s five largest oil companies from April 1, as BP refocuses on oil and gas after its push into renewables

Meg O’Neill speaks at an energy conference in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in June. Reuters
Meg O’Neill speaks at an energy conference in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in June. Reuters


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Company name: Play:Date

Launched: March 2017 on UAE Mother’s Day

Founder: Shamim Kassibawi

Based: Dubai with operations in the UAE and US

Sector: Tech 

Size: 20 employees

Stage of funding: Seed

Investors: Three founders (two silent co-founders) and one venture capital fund

Company profile

Name: Dukkantek 

Started: January 2021 

Founders: Sanad Yaghi, Ali Al Sayegh and Shadi Joulani 

Based: UAE 

Number of employees: 140 

Sector: B2B Vertical SaaS(software as a service) 

Investment: $5.2 million 

Funding stage: Seed round 

Investors: Global Founders Capital, Colle Capital Partners, Wamda Capital, Plug and Play, Comma Capital, Nowais Capital, Annex Investments and AMK Investment Office  

HAJJAN
%3Cp%3EDirector%3A%20Abu%20Bakr%20Shawky%C2%A0%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cbr%3EStarring%3A%20Omar%20Alatawi%2C%20Tulin%20Essam%2C%20Ibrahim%20Al-Hasawi%C2%A0%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cbr%3ERating%3A%204%2F5%3C%2Fp%3E%0A

Ponti

Sharlene Teo, Pan Macmillan

Dhadak 2

Director: Shazia Iqbal

Starring: Siddhant Chaturvedi, Triptii Dimri 

Rating: 1/5

THURSDAY'S ORDER OF PLAY

Centre Court

Starting at 10am:

Lucrezia Stefanini v Elena Rybakina (6)

Aryna Sabalenka (4) v Polona Hercog

Sofia Kenin (1) v Zhaoxuan Yan

Kristina Mladenovic v Garbine Muguruza (5)

Sorana Cirstea v Karolina Pliskova (3)

Jessica Pegula v Elina Svitolina (2)

Court 1

Starting at 10am:

Sara Sorribes Tormo v Nadia Podoroska

Marketa Vondrousova v Su-Wei Hsieh

Elise Mertens (7) v Alize Cornet

Tamara Zidansek v Jennifer Brady (11)

Heather Watson v Jodie Burrage

Vera Zvonareva v Amandine Hesse

Court 2

Starting at 10am:

Arantxa Rus v Xiyu Wang

Maria Kostyuk v Lucie Hradecka

Karolina Muchova v Danka Kovinic

Cori Gauff v Ulrikke Eikeri

Mona Barthel v Anastasia Gasanova

Court 3

Starting at 10am:

Kateryna Bondarenko v Yafan Wang

Aliaksandra Sasnovich v Anna Bondar

Bianca Turati v Yaroslava Shvedova

The schedule

December 5 - 23: Shooting competition, Al Dhafra Shooting Club

December 9 - 24: Handicrafts competition, from 4pm until 10pm, Heritage Souq

December 11 - 20: Dates competition, from 4pm

December 12 - 20: Sour milk competition

December 13: Falcon beauty competition

December 14 and 20: Saluki races

December 15: Arabian horse races, from 4pm

December 16 - 19: Falconry competition

December 18: Camel milk competition, from 7.30 - 9.30 am

December 20 and 21: Sheep beauty competition, from 10am

December 22: The best herd of 30 camels

The specs: 2017 Ford F-150 Raptor

Price, base / as tested Dh220,000 / Dh320,000

Engine 3.5L V6

Transmission 10-speed automatic

Power 421hp @ 6,000rpm

Torque 678Nm @ 3,750rpm

Fuel economy, combined 14.1L / 100km

Company profile

Company: Verity

Date started: May 2021

Founders: Kamal Al-Samarrai, Dina Shoman and Omar Al Sharif

Based: Dubai

Sector: FinTech

Size: four team members

Stage: Intially bootstrapped but recently closed its first pre-seed round of $800,000

Investors: Wamda, VentureSouq, Beyond Capital and regional angel investors

MATCH INFO

Mumbai Indians 186-6 (20 ovs)
Kings XI Punjab 183-5 (20 ovs)

Mumbai Indians won by three runs

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