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Power plant in Dubai
Gas LNG Qatar Saudi Arabia UAE
James Gavin
20 October 2025
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Mideast states power up their gas priorities

Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar are ploughing resources into gas—with a growing eye on facilitating domestic use in power and value-added sectors

Natural gas has moved to the forefront of Saudi Arabia’s energy policy as policymakers look to end the inefficient and financially wasteful burning of crude oil in its power generation system by replacing it with domestically produced gas. Under its Vision 2030 programme, Saudi Arabia is looking at a 50/50 split in future power sector use between gas and low-carbon energy sources. That would remove more than 1m b/d of liquids consumed in its power system, freeing up more crude for export. It would also limit the peak summer season increase in high-sulphur fuel oil consumption. Joint Organizations Data Initiative statistics show that direct oil burn averaged 943,000b/d in H1 2025, which remai

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QatarEnergy and JERA enter new LNG chapter
6 February 2026
The long close relationship between key supplier Qatar and pivotal buyer Japan becomes even deeper following new landmark deal 
Evolving partnerships in LNG
6 February 2026
Partnerships across the LNG value chain have evolved over time, growing in both complexity and importance, according to panellists at LNG2026
Dangote: Big ambitions, harsh realities
6 February 2026
Nigeria's mega-refinery is still trying to solve many challenges, all while its owner talks up expansion
EU methane regulation could backfire
5 February 2026
While broadly supportive of EU efforts to tackle methane emissions, representatives of the gas industry warn it could deter supply contracting if timelines and compliance requirements are not made more pragmatic

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