A far-reaching transformation is underway in Abu Dhabi's industrial heartland in Ruwais. As Adnoc accelerates delivery of its strategy, including AED200 billion ($55 billion) in new project awards for 2026-2028, the company is driving industrial growth across the UAE and advancing the Make it in the Emirates initiative by scaling its downstream investments and strengthening In-Country Value (ICV) across its operations.
The planned project awards announced at the “Make it with Adnoc”
forum are creating significant opportunities for local manufacturing and
engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractors, strengthening
domestic supply chains and supporting a more competitive industrial economy, reported Emirates News Agency (WAM).
“Adnoc is scaling its downstream investments to strengthen
the UAE’s industrial resilience and advance the Make it in the Emirates
initiative," said Nasser Al Muhairi, CEO of Downstream Industry, Marketing
and Trading at Adnoc.
He added: "Across our downstream businesses, we are
delivering major projects at scale, including the Ta’ziz chemicals ecosystem,
the Ruwais LNG project and the Borouge 4 expansion, marking the next phase of
growth and value creation."
Through an integrated model spanning feedstock, production,
logistics and trading, Adnoc is enhancing supply chain security, enabling a
competitive domestic manufacturing sector and reinforcing the UAE’s position as
a global hub for energy, chemicals and industry.
These efforts, he said, align with the UAE’s broader
industrial strategy to localise critical industrial products, reinforce supply
chain resilience and reduce reliance on imports.
Al Muhairi said Adnoc’s existing downstream investments are
already delivering tangible impact, supported by a wide range of strategic
projects. T
he Borouge 4 expansion will add 1.4 million tonnes per year
of petrochemical capacity, increasing total capacity to 6.4 million tonnes
annually.
The project includes the world’s largest Borstar gas-phase
reactor and has generated nearly $600 million (AED2.2 billion) in local
purchase orders.
Elsewhere in Ruwais, phase one Of TA’ZIZ, the industrial
chemicals joint venture between Adnoc and ADQ, is set to contribute AED183
billion ($50 billion) to the UAE economy, creating 20,000 construction jobs and
6,000 permanent roles over the lifetime of the project.
The development is set to reach a production capacity of 4.7
million tonnes of chemicals annually by 2028, supported by long‑term commercial
agreements across methanol and PVC value chains announced at Make it in the
Emirates 2026, totalling around AED104 billion ($28.5 billion), strengthening
the UAE’s supply chain resilience.
Adnoc is also advancing major gas and infrastructure
projects to further strengthen industrial capability.
Adnoc Gas has awarded $5 billion in contracts for phase one
of the Rich Gas Development project, while the ESTIDAMA gas pipeline expansion
has driven EPC awards exceeding AED2 billion ($550 million), with approximately
70 percent expected to flow back into the UAE economy.
The Ruwais LNG project is supported by an AED20.2 billion
($5.5 billion) EPC contract, with up to 55 percent of value retained locally,
while the AED3.58 billion ($975 million) Lower Zakum artificial island project
by Adnoc L&S has delivered 75 percent local value retention.
Alongside infrastructure, Adnoc’s downstream businesses are
also developing a robust pipeline of Emirati talent.
Adnoc’s Trading businesses have expanded from just five
professionals in 2019 to over 400 today, including more than 140 UAE nationals
working in real-time trading, risk management and global market analysis using
advanced digital and AI-enabled systems.
