The Outlook For The Gulf Projects Market: The Confederation of Danish Industry's Middle East Day, Copenhagen
The Outlook For The Gulf Projects Market: The Confederation of Danish Industry's Middle East Day, Copenhagen
The Outlook For The Gulf Projects Market: The Confederation of Danish Industry's Middle East Day, Copenhagen
7 December, 2011
Angus Hindley, MEED Research Director
MEED Insight
MEED Insight is a bespoke research service brought to you by the MEED group (www.meed.com). Providing tailor-made research, data and analysis, MEED Insight draws on our data-rich archives and unique relationships with key business decision-makers across the Middle East.
OUR EXPERTISE
SELECTED REPORTS
GCC WASTEWATER 2009
MARKET SURVEYS
Agenda The impact of the Arab spring The drivers for capital investment in infrastructure The opportunities, challenges and procurement trends The recent performance of the Gulf projects market Closing remarks
Morocco Libya
Egypt
Jordan
Bahrain Saudi Arabia Oman Revolution and regime change Revolution and regime change Minor demonstrations Yemen
Minor demonstrations
Serious civil unrest
In the GCC, serious political unrest has been confined to, and contained in, Bahrain. In the rest of the Middle East and North Africa, regime change has taken place in three states and civil war in two more
- Oman unveils anti-corruption drive and pledges to create 40,000 jobs a year
- the UAE pledges to improve infrastructure in the northern emirates, which is well below the standards in Abu Dhabi and Dubai
115
$ a barrel
Despite downward revisions, oil prices are expected to remain above the GCC breakeven point of $80-85 a barrel
110
105
100
95
Saudi Arabia
Tunisia
UAE
10
All MENA states have high demographic rates, most notably in Qatar where the population doubled in the five years to 2009
Source: IMF
In addition to meet increasing demand from expanding populations and economies, there is a growing need to decommission infrastructure which is now at the end of its life having been built in the 1970s and 1980s.
70,000 60,000 MW 50,000 40,000 30,000 20,000 10,000 0 Saudi Arabia Oman Dubai Kuwait Qatar
Abu Dhabi
Bahrain
Iraq
Over $60bn will be required in the water and wastewater sectors to meet demand, increase capacity and expand network coverage with about half of the investment accounted for by Saudi Arabia
Water
Wastewater
Sources: MEED Insight, GWI
19,567 8,732
40,656 17,498
4,132 25,831
9,100 3,783
73,455 55,844
Over $275bn of transportation projects are planned with rail accounting for the largest share of the total at $120bn
2011 has been a record year for power capacity contracted from the private developer market, despite only three projects being concluded
Successful PPP type projects have been few and far between in the last two years with the notable exceptions of the Al-Muharraq STP in Bahrain and Medina airport in Saudi Arabia
Abu Dhabi has effectively abandoned the approach for its social infrastructure programme, as well on flagship transportation projects such as the midfield terminal and Mafraq-Ghuweifat highway Kuwaits Partnerships Technical Bureau (PTB) has over 30 large-scale infrastructure projects planned as PPPs but much will depend on how the AlZour north IWPP proceeds National Water Company (NWC) is revisiting the BOT model for its $30bn capital investment programme, with the aim of tendering its first project in 2013
GCC governments are cash rich, having benefitted from 10years of rising oil prices The global credit crunch, and subsequent Eurozone crisis, has hit the GCC project finance market The perceived high cost of PPPs against conventional procurement The often lengthy time taken to deliver a PPP
35
30 25 20 15 10 5
0
Kuwait Qatar 2010 Oman 2011 Saudi Arabia
Iraq
Kuwait Oman Qatar
8.4
10.1 4.4 10.5
24.2
7.8 4.7 10.9
Saudi Arabia
UAE
* first nine months Source: MEED Projects
35.7
30.1
47.1
16.8
Saudi Arabia has maintained its position as the largest projects market in the MENA region in 2011 while Iraq has seen the biggest growth
Lower margins and potentially rising subcontractor and equipment costs in selected markets
An estimated $1.1tn of project work is at the planning, design or tendering stage in the Gulf
200
$bn 150
100
50 0 Iraq Oman Qatar Bahrain Kuwait Saudi Arabia UAE
130
Infrastructure and construction projects will account for the majority of future work in the Gulf followed by oil and gas
217
467
330
Construction
Infrastructure
Others
Closing Remarks
The outlook for the Gulf construction sector is reasonable, considering the Arab spring, the global economic downturn and the European financial crisis The engine of growth will be infrastructure, which will be largely government-financed, provided oil prices remain above the critical $80 threshold Saudi Arabia will be the most important market, with Iraq and Kuwait having potential for strong growth Competition for new work will remain intense and bureaucratic, localisation and security/political issues will have to be overcome in some markets Keys to contractor success will be a long-term commitment to the region, competitive pricing and a willingness to go increasingly local
For more information on this presentation or any MEED services, please contact: Angus Hindley, Research Director, MEED Mob: +44 7918 166446 [email protected]