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GCC Projects Overview A briefing to MEED Projects Customers Abu Dhabi, 19 November 2012

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  • GCC Projects Overview

    A briefing to MEED Projects Customers

    Abu Dhabi, 19 November 2012

  • Baghdad approves $118bn draft budget for 2013 – MEED 5 Nov

    Saudi Arabia's king appoints new interior minister – BBC, 5 Nov

    UN: Iran not cooperating on nuclear probe – Daily Star, 5 Nov

    Bahrain bomb blasts kill two foreign workers – BBC, 5 Nov

    Syria opposition groups hold Qatar meeting – MEED, 4 Nov

    UAE approves deficit-free budget for 2013 – MEED, 31 Oct

    IMF warns GCC to cut government spending – MEED, 30 Nov

    Adviser lined up for NWC privatisation – MEED, 30 Oct

    Kuwait awards $2.6bn Subiya Causeway contract – MEED, 29 Oct

    Contractors submit bids for Doha Metro Red Line - MEED 16 Oct

    Kuwait approves $433m worth of road projects – MEED, 10 Oct

    Headlines

  • • Regionally/globally, outlook is uncertain

    • Global outlook worsened, although emerging economies have performed well

    • MENA disrupted by upheaval, but high oil prices boost oil exporters

    • IMF forecasting MENA growth of 5.3% in 2012, downturn in 2013

    • Oil price outlook - $110 barrel in 2012 and $94/barrel in 2013, up from $104/barrel in 2011 and $79/barrel in 2010

    • GCC growth = 5.3% in 2012 (3.9.% (oil), 6.4% (non oil))

    • MENA oil exporters = 5.5%

    • MENA oil importers = 2.2%

    • Iraq = 10.2% (14.7% in 2013)

    The economic outlook (IMF)

    Source: IMF World Economic Outlook, October 2012

    -6.0

    -4.0

    -2.0

    0.0

    2.0

    4.0

    6.0

    8.0

    10.0

    2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

    World Advanced economies Emerging economies

    MENA GCC MENA oil importers

    UAE

    Real GDP growth forecast for 2012 and 2013 (%) - IMF

  • • Lower-than-expected oil prices

    • Increase government spending

    means that long-term dip in oil

    prices will squeeze budgets

    raising prospect of fiscal deficits

    • Global recession due to

    eurozone debt crisis, sluggish

    US growth and further shocks

    • Lack of growth and subsidy cuts

    needed to maintain fiscal

    discipline adds to social tensions

    • Greater economic divide

    • Banking sector problems – credit

    remains a challenge

    BREAK EVEN OIL PRICES ($/barrel)

    2010 2011 2012

    Algeria 95 95 105

    Bahrain 92 100 115

    Iran 70 86 115

    Iraq 90 102 110

    Kuwait 56 50 50

    Libya 55 na na

    Oman 58 74 80

    Qatar 25 38 40

    Saudi Arabia 75 80 75

    Sudan 140 na Na

    UAE 55 84 80

    Yemen 130 150 240

    The risks to the outlook (IMF)

  • The regional economic outlook

    The region as a whole and GCC in particular has a strongly positive macro environment

  • “The US will overtake Saudi Arabia and Russia to become the world’s largest global oil producer by the

    second half of this decade”

    “a drop in global oil prices would affect production , since tight oil

    requires a high market price to be economic”

    “US will be producing 11.1m b/d in 2020 compared with Saudi output

    of 10.6m b/d. Saudi Arabia will have regained top spot by 2030 pumping 11.4m b/d compared

    with the US’s 10.2m b/d”

    Alarming headlines

  • WEO 2012 – a closer look

  • WEO 2012 – implications

    US oil output growth and softening of US demand means possible drop in oil price

    Speed of US oil output growth means oil-exporters only have a 5 year window in which to enjoy high surpluses

    Increasing importance of Iraq in the region, economically and probably politically

    Universal natural gas demand means hydrocarbons investment focus must shift to gas production

    Imperative for reduction in fuel subsidy in GCC/MENA without increase in tariffs, demands energy efficient buildings, transport, industry

    Governments must invest while they have surpluses to invest

    Governments have a narrow window of opportunity

    Iraq to displace Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar as biggest projects’ market

    Emphasis on previously uneconomic unassociated gas and gas recovery

    Public transport, water re-use, green buildings, alternative energy

  • -

    50,000

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    $ m

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    nGCC/MENA: Project markets by value of contracts awarded ($m)

    2007 to 2012 (YTD)

    Water

    Transport

    Power

    Oil

    Industrial

    Gas

    Construction

    Chemical

    GCC $776bn)

    MENA $358bn

    Landscape since 2004 has been dominated by UAE, KSA construction; last 3 years sees UAE contraction and KSA growth

    GCC, MENA Projects Market (1)

  • -

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    $ m

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    nGCC/MENA: Project markets by budget value of unawarded projects

    ($m) 2012 to 2017

    Water

    Transport

    Power

    Oil

    Industrial

    Gas

    Construction

    Chemical

    GCC $1,081bn)

    MENA $747bn

    Big shift in this picture is due entirely to the inclusion of the Saudi nuclear and renewables programme. Iraq has potential to be at least as big as UAE

    GCC, MENA Projects Market (2)

  • GCC – recent history by country

    Arrow indicates trend over past 2 years: flat = Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman; growing = Qatar, UAE; slowing = KSA

    40% 36% 11% 7% 5% 2%

    % of contracts awarded

  • UAE accounts for 67% of the total number of awarded projects put on hold or cancelled since 2007, equivalent to 74% of the total contract value of those projects

    GCC – recent history by country

    5% 4% 6% 6% 13% 67%

    % of inactive

    4% 2% 5% 7% 9% 74%

    % of contract

  • GCC – recent history by sector

    Civil Construction (Construction and Transport) consistently the largest sector, except in 2009 (financial crisis)

    42% 40%

    31%

    61%

    42% 48%

    % contract value of non-Civil projects

  • GCC – recent history by sector

    Civil Construction (Construction and Transport) consistently the largest sector, except in 2009 (financial crisis)

    42% 40%

    31%

    61%

    42% 48% 49%

    % contract value of non-Civil projects

  • 0

    100

    200

    300

    400

    500

    600

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    800

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    2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

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    GCC: Contract awards vs completing projects 2000 to 2012

    Contracts Awarded Projects CompletingContracts Awarded (Qatar) Projects Completing (Qatar)

    69%

    71% 67%

    71%

    51%

    60%

    35%

    42%

    32%

    8%

    57%

    52%

    GCC award to completion ratio

    In recent years Qatar has exhibited negative award to completion ratios suggesting that since the end of the LNG boom and the collapse of the real estate construction market, Qatar has been very conservative

    GCC – Completions vs Awards

    53%

  • • KSA awards proportionately more big contracts than GCC

    • Count of contract awards actually increased after 2009 but will drop in 2012

    • More contracts of $1bn or more were awarded in 2009, 2010, 2011 than in any other year

    • Most contracts awarded in 2009, 2010, 2011 were in the $50-$100m band

    • Inference: biggest and smallest projects have been the least susceptible to market conditions

    • But in 2012, likely that the lowest value bands will see the biggest volume of awards

    GCC – Contract awards by value band

    7%

    7%

    % of highest value projects awarded

    UAE

    GCC

    8%

    8%

    21%

    16% 8%

    10%

    18%

    7%

    8%

    10%

    UAE

    GCC

    GCC

    UAE

    GCC

    UAE

    UAE

    GCC

    UAE

    GCC

    18 17 10

    8 8

    18 23 9 10

    3

    9 19 1 2 4

    21 21 9 3

    6

    23 22 12 4

    7

    19 17 5

    4 6

  • GCC – Key sectors: Transport

    Biggest of the four Key Sectors at $140bn; energy efficient, West-East energy trade, GCC as a hub

    Transport cashflow peak is reached in late 2016, but note that this accounts only for known masterplans.

    Rail accounts for half of all awards in GCC and roads/rail infrastructure for 80% of transport spending

    $139,594m

    Cashflow

  • GCC – Key sectors: Renewables

    Despite the early 2011 Fukushima disaster, Riyadh has remained firmly committed to nuclear. As part of its studies, Ka-Care drew up four different scenarios for its deployment, setting out various options for the schedule and size of the programme. The optimised scenario calls for the construction of 11 nuclear reactors with total capacity of 17,600MW by 2030, with the first due to be commissioned in 2020/21. The location of the first reactors will be finalised once Australia’s WorleyParsons completes in the third quarter of 2012 site investigation studies. Once finalised, Riyadh is expected to move swiftly in tendering the first batch of reactors given that it will need to award the initial contracts in 2013 if it is to hit its 2020/21 target.

    The kingdom’s solar plans are even more ambitious, especially as it has only limited solar experience and installed capacity of less than 20MW. Ka-Care is targeting 41,000MW of capacity within 19 years of the programme being launched. This, it estimates, would save the kingdom an estimated 523,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day of hydrocarbons.

    $89,925m

  • GCC – Key sectors: Gas

    Few viable unassociated fields so investment is necessarily longer term (Khazzan, Dorra, Bab, Hail)

    Immediate opportunities in energy capacity building limited to Oil

    Qatar North Field moratorium may be lifted in 2015 – new wave of LNG investment?

    $48,152m

    Cashflow

  • GCC – Key sectors: Water

    Double peak of transmission spending is Qatar (LRDP) and then longer Qatar projects supplemented by Riyadh sewerage

    Transmission and treatment of sewage accounts for half of all spending between end 2010 and end 2020

    $24,150m

    Cashflow

  • Lack of activity in all sectors caused by political stalemate and uncertainty

    Subiya causeway award in October changed the course of the weakest year of awards since 2009

    KOC talking about long term plans for the oil sector, to increase output to 4m bpd by 2030 but time running out to meet 2020 clean Fuels deadline

    No substantial Refinery projects and no movement yet on Clean Fuels or KNPC Refinery Projects

    Volume of awards will be about the same in 2012 vs prior years but top end expectation unlikely to exceed $10.5bn – equivalent to 2010

    Subiya causeway award may now give impetus to other urban dev projects in Kuwait City and Subiya itself

    Kuwait – 2012 Outlook

  • Saudi Arabia – 2012 Outlook

    Awards in June in Pet-chem and Power, masked lower than expected infra awards in H1 2012, in all but higher ed. 26 of the 148 contracts awarded by public bodies awarded by MOHE

    Lack of activity in upstream and midstream sectors (delays to Jizan for instance)

    Total value of awards in KSA was $32bn in first 9 months of 2012, compared with $55bn over the equivalent period in 2011

    But potential value of infrastructure awards in the Kingdom as a proportion of total potential projects is lower than any other GCC market, even though value of projects is enormous in absolute terms ($80bn)

    Big awards = just 6% of total number of contracts awarded in KSA, vs 18% in 2011 and 2011.

    Volume of awards will actually increase in 2012 vs prior years but top end expectation unlikely to better 2009 ($59bn) at around $50bn.

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    Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

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    Qatar: Number and Value of Awarded Contracts and Scheduled Awards 2012

    Sum of contract value

    Sum of contract value (Aug snapshot)

    Count of projects (Aug snapshot)

    Count of Projects

    ScheduledScheduledAwarded(Sep snaphot)

    (Sep snaphot)

    Bid deadlines for $5bn worth of packages for Golden Line Tunneling package, Education City/ Msheireb Stations extended into Nov

    Bid deadlines for Tunneling worth $6bn (Blue/Green lines) moved to end Oct

    August’s analysis $22bn worth of contracts at late bidding scheduled for award Sept to Dec

    Overall impact on project volumes/ values in 2012 significant only because full year expected to deliver 100+ contracts, worth in excess of $25bn.

    There is still a possibility that the Red Line packages will be awarded on time

    Qatar – 2012 Outlook

    Volume of awards to drop to between 80 and 90 and top end expectation for 2012 only slightly up on 2011 ($14.5bn) at around $15-19bn.

  • Volume of awards to increase to between 170 and 190 and top end expectation for 2012 10% up on 2011 ($22.8bn) at around $25bn.

    UAE – 2012 Outlook

    Dubai led by Civil Construction (buildings and transport); as busy as 2009 (volume/value)

    2012 recovery for Abu Dhabi led by award of ADAC midfield terminal award and Takreer carbon black: both $2bn+

    Dubai shows almost as much activity but only one award worth more than $1bn (Aviation City)

    Abu Dhabi also shows market led by civil, but a more even spread of spending across sectors; no obvious rebound since slump of H2 2012. UZ750 EPC2 still expected in December

    Modest value of contract awards in Northern Emirates; Federal government spending accounts for 40%+ of awards including biggest project – Fujairah WDN

  • GCC – 2013 Outlook

    Predicting $112bn full year 2012

    Best case: $170bn full year 2013 if KSA rebounds, all scheduled Qatar projects are awarded

    Mid case: $137bn full year 2013 if KSA has modest rebound, Qatar delays Gold, Blue and Green Line

  • Julian Herbert – Director Product Development, MEED

    Projects

    Abu Dhabi Conference, 18 November 2012

    P.O.Box 25960 20th Floor, Al Thuraya Tower 1 Dubai Media City, Dubai, UAE

    m: +971 (0) 50 557 4140 t +971 (0) 4 390 0045 d +971 (0) 4 390 0849 f +971(0) 4 368 8025

    i www.meedprojects.com

    http://www.meedprojects.com/