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Production at the Nasr field is set to rise to 115,000 bpd by 2027. (Image source: Adobe Stock)

ADNOC Onshore has awarded a US$942mn EPCI contract to McDermott International for the Nasr-115 expansion project, located around 130 km northwest of Abu Dhabi

The Nasr-115 Expansion Project is a critical component of the overall Nasr Phase II Full Field Development project, expected to increase oil production capacity to 115,000 barrels per day (bpd) by 2027. The contract will help advance ADNOC’s strategy to reach oil production capacity of 5mn bpd by 2027.

The scope of work covers comprehensive engineering, procurement, construction and installation for two topside structures, one new manifold tower, one jacket, one bridge and all associated pipelines, cables and brownfield modifications.

More of 55% of the contract value (more than US$500mn) will return to the UAE economy through ADNOC’s In-Country Value Program.

“McDermott shares ADNOC's commitment to increase offshore production capacity and will do its part with safe, efficient delivery of the Nasr-115 Expansion Project to the highest quality standards," said Mike Sutherland, McDermott's senior vice president, Offshore Middle East. "Our decades-long track record of delivering innovative, comprehensive solutions across complex offshore developments supports ADNOC's vision for sustainable energy growth and to meet its capacity goals as part of the P5 project.”

“This award underscores McDermott's position as a trusted partner in executing large-scale energy infrastructure projects in the region. We are proud to further support development of the UAE's energy sector in a safe and sustainable manner,” added Angela De Vincentis, McDermott's vice president of Operations, Offshore Middle East.

Nasr is one of ADNOC’s most advanced digital fields. It uses a suite of technology solutions to maximise production and minimise emissions, including AIQ’s Robowell, a pioneering artificial intelligence (AI) autonomous well-control solution. According to ADNOC, the work will include a new high-speed subsea cable connection which will support the scale-up of AI-enabled operations at Nasr, as ADNOC seeks to become the world's most AI-enabled energy company.

The LNG market faces a potential oversupply. (Image source: Adobe Stock)

The gas and LNG markets face potential oversupply thanks to record FID and demand uncertainty, according to energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie, which identifies five key global gas and LNG themes for 2026:

LNG FID momentum to moderate despite continued project progress

2025 was a record year for final investment decisions, with nine projects totaling 72 mmtpa moving ahead. Three smaller floating LNG projects, two in Argentina and one in Mozambique, advanced, with CP2

Phase 2, Delfin FLNG 1 and Cheniere's Sabine Pass Stage 5 "probable" FID for 2026, supported by strong contracting and cost advantages.

However, with 225 mmtpa of LNG supply currently under construction, the expectation is for lower LNG prices and rising EPC costs. Several projects face delays from inflated construction costs, supply chain constraints and evolving financing conditions. Competition for customers between pre-FID projects and post-FID players is likely to increase. FIDs for well positioned projects, including LNG Canda and

Qatar’s North Field West, may slip into 2027. The outlook for FIDs is expected to moderate in 2026.

Prediction: 4-5 projects take FID in 2026

Asian LNG demand expected to rebound after sharp 2025 contraction

Asian LNG demand contracted by more than 12 Mt year-on-year (4.5%), with China declining by 11 Mt due to a mild winter, high LNG prices and US trade tariffs.

Supply growth of nearly 30 Mt is likely to drive spot prices below oil price parity, encouraging more spot procurement from emerging markets.

China will be the market to watch. Gas demand should grow by 5% on infrastructure projects and real estate recovery. With stable domestic production and flat pipeline imports, LNG will fill the gap, increasing by around 6 Mt but still below 2024 import levels. New gas-fired power stations and regasification capacity will contribute to increased demand across Taiwan, Bangladesh and Vietnam. Weather remains a wild card.

Firmer Asian demand will prove increasingly critical to absorb the wave of new LNG supply.

Prediction: Asian LNG demand to increase by 14 Mt (+5%) in 2026

Russia-Ukraine peace deal could reshape European gas and global LNG balances

The prospect of a US-brokered peace deal in Ukraine fuelled sharp gas price swings in 2025. Should a peace agreement be announced, the most likely market impact would be the lifting of sanctions on Arctic LNG-2 and Portovaya, which could add up to 10 mmtpa to a global LNG market already poised to increase by close to 30 Mt in 2026.

The EU agreed to phase out Russian LNG by 2027 and pipeline gas by 2028. Russian supply under short-term contracts is expected to end from April 2026 for LNG and June 2026 for pipeline flows. The immediate 2026 market impact would be limited, though the EU's resolve may be tested if the ban becomes a peace settlement bargaining point.

Prediction: The EU moves ahead with ban on Russian imports

Henry Hub to trade above US$4/mmbtu as US gas market tightens structurally

Colder than average temperatures briefly drove Henry Hub futures as high as $5.50/mmbtu in December 2025. The US gas market is becoming structurally tighter. LNG exports have increased 17% compared to the same period last year.

LNG export capacity expansion will require incremental feedgas of 2.7 bcfd, with data centres and other sectors adding 3.4 bcfd total in 2026, equivalent to 3%.

As usual, weather dynamics will be key for where prices settle in the winter. Beyond that, the pace and magnitude of price correction will depend on how quickly suppliers respond to tightening fundamentals.

Higher Henry Hub prices longer term will be necessary to promote growth.

Prediction: Henry Hub will average US$4/mmbtu in 2026

EU Methane Regulation and CSDDD face industry criticism over compliance challenges

The EU Methane Regulation (MER) and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) have faced strong criticism from the gas and LNG industries in 2025, especially from major global exporters.

Companies support MER objectives but say compliance difficulties are delaying new contracts and risk disrupting imports as Europe ends Russian reliance.

The CSDDD has already been scaled back by EU officials. Yet critics point out that the EU is imposing obligations on companies outside its jurisdiction, a major sticking point. The US and Qatar warned that the rules could threaten their ability to supply LNG to the bloc.

Prediction: The EU is likely to proceed with both regulations, but further watering down and additional practical compliance measures should be expected

"The gas and LNG industry is navigating a complex transition as abundant new supply meets questions about demand growth and regulatory risks," said Massimo Di Odoardo, vice president, Gas and LNG Research. "The structural tightening of the US gas market, combined with Europe's push to end Russian imports while implementing stricter methane rules, creates both opportunity and risk. How Asia responds to lower prices will be critical to absorbing the supply wave ahead."

Protests in Iran are threatening to disrupt the country’s upstream sector and highlighting a deeper economic crisis, according to Rystad Energy analysis

Iran has restored output and exports despite sanctions, but at a rising cost: deeper discounts to China, expensive ‘shadow’ logistics and shrinking fiscal buffers, including the running down of its National Development Fund (NDF).

Iranian crude production is expected to remain stable at around 3.2mn bpd this year, according to Rystad, with limited short-term disruption to upstream operations, despite significant financing and redevelopment hurdles. The greater risk currently is the geopolitical risk premium as tensions rise and uncertainty persists. With the US administration of President Donald Trump exerting maximum economic pressure on Iran’s trading partners and threatening military intervention, the Middle Eastern oil giant will likely entrench itself even further.

“Iran’s familiar tactics, such as closing the Strait of Hormuz, banking on its trade with China and threatening nuclear escalation, are still on the table, yet must be weighed by their own potential for backfiring on the regime. Economically, Iran has been cornered by heavy sanctions, yet the country has managed to protect what limited revenue remains. Although the US has announced that it will impose a 25% tariff on countries that trade with Iran, China’s crude buying patterns are expected to remain stable. China has an established practice of sourcing discounted barrels from sanctioned producers, and Iran has a proven ability to sustain exports through sanctions evading trade networks. For the status quo to be truly disrupted, external intervention would have to take place,” said Aditya Saraswat, MENA research director at Rystad Energy.

Amid the backdrop of international pressure, Iran’s economy has faced enormous constraints, with inflation standing at 40% as the government’s total budget only nominally increased from US$98bn to US$111bn in the past year. National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) is officially entitled to 14.5% of total oil and gas exports, which stood at 1.85mn bpd in the current budget. However one-third of oil exports were handed over to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), and expected oil exports have now dropped to 1mn bpd, while the benchmark oil price has been lowered to US$57 per barrel from US$63 per barrel, reducing NIOC’s total receivables.

In addition, many of Iran’s core producing assets are in late life and experiencing steep natural declines. Underinvestment in maintenance, workovers and pressure support will accelerate the decline rates of these legacy fields. Many gas fields have complex structures and low recovery rates that pose challenges for local contractors. With assets under pressure, Iran’s NDF, which was designed to preserve a share of oil and gas revenues for future generations, continues to be treated as a source of near-term financing.

“From the regime’s point of view, the only redeeming factor in this situation is China’s role as the key driver of export revenues. As it stands, China accounts for 90% of Iran’s oil exports, with even a portion of cargoes booked for ‘unknown’ destinations ending up in China. Although the current export model looks feasible in the near term, its sustainability is becoming more conditional,” Saraswat said.

The recovery of Iran’s exports has been driven mainly by discounting, with additional costs incurred by measures required to evade sanctions, such as operating a shadow fleet. Without access to conventional banking channels, Iran relies on yuan-denominated accounts, barter arrangements or circuitous money-laundering pathways that extract substantial commissions. These structural inefficiencies mean Iran receives only two-thirds of benchmark oil, threatening Iran's ability to make a profit, even amid low upstream breakevens of US$20 to US$25 per barrel.

“Iran’s survival under sanctions reflects a mix of sustained upstream investment, strong trade relationships and covert workarounds. The continued brownfield redevelopment of mature fields has helped keep output stable, while contracts awarded to local players have added incremental volumes. However, a heavier reliance on China has drawbacks for Iran. Its margins will weaken as shadow logistics and intermediaries are priced in, and demand could be volatile as quotas and refinery runs change,” Saraswat concluded.

Oil and gas operators face a number of challenges this year. (Image source: KBR)

Paul Bansil, director of KBR’s international consulting business, outlines five major trends that will shape how oil and gas operators navigate the year ahead, as project developers allocate capital more selectively, face growing regulatory scrutiny and tackle the challenges of decarbonising existing assets

2026 will be defined by bankability, repurposing of existing infrastructure, lifetime planning and geopolitically driven divergence, Bansil says.

“In 2026, what the industry needs is certainty and bankability. This presents a firm footing to turn good ideas into investable, technically sound projects. The time pressure has always been there, but the current fiscal and geopolitical uncertainty makes timely decision-making an order of magnitude more challenging for operators, whether they are investing in new opportunities, modernising, repurposing or retiring assets.”

1. Bankability the decisive success factor

Bansil expects disciplined early-stage development planning to be one of the strongest determinants of project viability in 2026.

“Many energy transition schemes, including hydrogen, ammonia, fertiliser modernisation and refinery decarbonisation, continue to stall at the pre-FEED or FEED stage because owners have sometimes moved too quickly into engineering without first proving and stress-testing the commercial, regulatory and financial aspects of the business case,” he says.

Suitable fit-for-purpose early-phase opportunity screening will enable operators to focus valuable time and resources on those prospects most likely to progress through project sanction and into execution.

2. Sanction of undeveloped oil and gas projects

Continued responsible development of oil and gas projects is emerging as a recognised necessity if an orderly and prosperous energy transition is to be realised.

“We have seen a re-focus towards energy security in a number of areas. This will continue in 2026 as the demand for hydrocarbon fuels and petrochemical feedstock remains a fundamental cornerstone of our society in a global context,” comments Bansil.

“This is not about one thing versus another, but rather a pathway towards an orderly and sustainable transition built on confidence.”

3. Existing assets will act as a bridge to energy transition

A strong emphasis on repurposing and progressive decarbonisation of existing oil & gas, LNG, refining and petrochemical infrastructure is expected as operators seek practical and scalable transition pathways. This will allow affordable production while enabling development of emissions-reducing technologies for further cost-effective reductions in the future.

This includes adapting terminals to become multipurpose new energy molecule import terminals to handle a variety of energy carriers including ammonia for import and cracking to hydrogen as well as handling carbon dioxide for sequestration.

Modular LNG and FLNG solutions will remain a key building block in the gas supply chain.

At the same time, brownfield decarbonisation is growing across refineries and petrochemical sites, where operators are prioritising retrofit and circularity over greenfield developments. Operators are increasingly turning to lighter feedstocks, recovered gases, recycled hydrocarbons and low-carbon hydrogen options.

“Gas remains central to system stability and affordability,” Bansil adds. “But the real shift is the industry’s focus on making today’s assets cleaner and more flexible, rather than waiting for perfect conditions for new-build projects.”

4. Master planning and end-of-life responsibilities come to the fore

2026 will be the year when structured master planning takes centre stage, encompassing clear consideration of uncertainty. Investors and operators now expect integrated assessments of market outlooks, emissions pathways, technology options, CAPEX and OPEX priorities, and an understanding of regulatory requirements to support investment or re-investment decisions.

With hundreds of assets globally approaching critical decision points of life extension, repurposing or decommissioning, in many cases these decisions have become major strategic issues.

“Historically, there has been a perception that an asset simply stops producing and decommissioning begins, but the reality is far more complex,” Bansil says.

“If repurposing is not an option and decommissioning is the only path remaining, preparing wells, understanding waste streams, managing ageing equipment, many of which are hazardous, and sequencing work safely takes years, not months. The companies that plan early will be the ones who control cost and protect value.”

5. Geopolitically shaped pathways accelerate regional divergence

Transition pathways are expected to fragment further across regions.

The Middle East will continue to rely on fossil fuels for system resilience, with some forays into energy transition. Africa’s progress in LNG, gas-to-power and infrastructure development remains slower than its potential.

Europe is pressing ahead with green regulation, but many operators are struggling to keep pace with the rate of policy change. It is expected that investment in renewables will be maintained, but having a diverse energy portfolio that includes oil and gas production alongside low carbon technologies will allow a cost-effective method for successful emissions reduction in the future.

In North America, tariff pressures, sanctions and shifting trade patterns are influencing investment decisions across fuels and fertilisers. It is expected that there will be a decline in clean energy investments driven by a lack of incentives. Instead, extending asset life and tiebacks to existing facilities will be prevalent along with investment in previously undeveloped hydrocarbon opportunities.

“Across every major market, geopolitical forces now shape what is possible and at what pace,” Bansil concludes. “Our role is to bring clarity, grounded feasibility and practical pathways that assist clients in making the right value-accretive long-term decisions.”

 

H.E. Ali Khalifa Al Shamsi, chief executive officer Emarat (left) and H.E. Khamis Al Mazrouei, chief executive officer, Sharjah National Oil Corporation.

Emirates Petroleum Company PJSC (Emarat), , and Sharjah National Oil Corporation (SNOC) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to cooperate on developing new business opportunities within the Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) industry sector

Under the MoU, the parties will work to advance the LPG sector, strengthen market resilience, and support the continued evolution of the UAE’s energy sector through commercially focused collaboration and long-term value creation. This agreement also provides a platform for Emarat and SNOC to align capabilities, explore mutually beneficial growth opportunities, and reinforce energy resilience through a future-ready approach that supports national priorities and market demand.

H.E. Ali Khalifa Al Shamsi, chief executive officer, Emarat, said, “This MoU reflects a UAE-first approach to building a more resilient and future-ready LPG gas ecosystem. Together with SNOC, we will pursue high-impact opportunities that strengthen continuity, expand market capabilities, and support the evolving needs of industry and communities. We see this collaboration as a long-term platform to deliver smarter energy solutions with measurable national value.”

H.E. Khamis Al Mazrouei, chief executive officer, Sharjah National Oil Corporation, said, “This MoU creates a strategic pathway for SNOC and Emarat to collaborate on pragmatic, growth-oriented opportunities in the LPG sector. By aligning capabilities and market intent, we aim to support stronger energy security, smarter infrastructure utilisation, and a more agile platform for the next phase of the UAE’s LPG gas development. Through this partnership, we intend to convert shared ambition into tangible outcomes that strengthen Sharjah’s and the UAE’s energy framework over the long term.”

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