Abu Dhabi advances fuel plan for Barakah nuclear plant
25 November 2025
Emirates Nuclear Energy Company (Enec) and France’s Framatome have completed the first lead fuel assemblies for the Barakah nuclear energy plant.
The assemblies were manufactured at Framatome’s US-based facility and will now undergo testing under Enec’s fuel qualification programme before any commercial use.
Barakah is the first multi-unit nuclear energy plant in the region. Its four APR-1400 reactors generate about 40 terawatt-hours (TWh) of electricity annually and supply around 25% of the UAE’s power demand.
In July, the firms announced a fuel supply agreement as part of Enec’s strategy to diversify Barakah’s nuclear fuel sources.
The plant completed its first year of full-fleet operations in September, generating more than 120TWh of clean electricity since Unit 1 began operating in 2021.
Construction began in July 2012, with Unit 4 completed in December 2023 and entering operation in September 2024. At its peak, the site was the world’s largest nuclear construction project, with four reactors built simultaneously.
The plant was delivered in partnership with Korea Electric Power Corporation (Kepco), under the oversight of the Federal Authority for Nuclear Regulation, and in line with standards set out by the International Atomic Energy Agency and the World Association of Nuclear Operators.
Over 2,000 UAE nationals now work at Barakah, alongside international experts, establishing a skilled Emirati-led nuclear workforce.
Framatome produced the first lead fuel assemblies at its NRC-licensed facility in Washington state. More than 6,000 assemblies of this type have previously been supplied from this site.
Barakah 2
MEED recently reported that discussions for Barakah 2 (Reactors 5-8) may be delayed by around two years, with tariff considerations potentially a key part of the next phase.
In addition, it was previously reported that the state utility, Emirates Water & Electricity Company (Ewec), does not foresee the installation of an additional 2.8GW of nuclear energy capacity until 2039.
Given the average 10-year procurement and construction period for nuclear power plants, this suggests talks will likely start sometime between 2027 and 2028.
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November 2025: Data drives regional projects25 November 2025
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MEED’s December 2025 report on Bahrain includes:
> COMMENT: Manama pursues reform amid strain
> GVT & ECONOMY: Bahrain’s cautious economic evolution
> BANKING: Mergers loom over Bahrain’s banking system
> OIL & GAS: Bahrain remains in pursuit of hydrocarbon resources
> POWER & WATER: Bahrain advances utility reform
> CONSTRUCTION: Bahrain construction faces major slowdown
> TRANSPORT: Air Asia aviation deal boosts connectivityTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15149339/main.gif -
Bahrain pursues reform amid strain25 November 2025
Commentary
John Bambridge
Analysis editorCautious optimism defines Bahrain’s current economic moment as the country presses ahead with a broad agenda of diversification, reform and targeted investment. Yet the more assertively Manama moves to reshape its future, the more the tension between its ambition and its fiscal constraints becomes evident as the defining feature of its policymaking.
Bahrain’s projects sector, which has now been shrinking for the past seven years, is emblematic of the country’s constricted spending. This year, contract awards have fallen to their lowest value in a decade. This signals a decisive shift to a more disciplined investment strategy aligned with fiscal realities and a more selective approach to forward-looking capital spending.
The diminished projects market is in turn a challenge for the financial sector, which now faces a receding pool of project financing and other contracting loans. This is giving further impetus to the potential consolidation of local lenders in the overbanked market, which is also beset by thinning margins, rising compliance costs and pressure to scale amid financial system modernisation. While it could create short-term pain, consolidation should boost the financial health of legacy lenders and provide stability in a sector increasingly being defined by new digital banking models and innovation.
Yet even as some sectors change, Bahrain’s government remains deeply reliant on hydrocarbons, which continues to drive exploration, including in the technically complex Khaleej Al-Bahrain basin. These activities reflect the practical need to maintain oil revenues in the medium term and, should additional recoverable reserves be discovered, a potent source of optimism.
Manana is meanwhile looking to overhaul the utilities sector by creating a dedicated regulator and new national operator. The reforms should make space for greater private participation, drawing more capital into power and water projects while improving efficiency and reducing state expenditure in an aspirationally positive step towards greater long-term sustainability.
Even as fiscal concerns narrow Manama’s policy options, it continues to secure strategic wins. A new aviation agreement with Air Asia establishes Bahrain as a regional hub for one of Asia’s largest low-cost carriers. This move opens new connectivity corridors and, alongside the renewal of direct Gulf Air routes to the US, reinforces Bahrain’s position as a gateway between regions, promising benefits for tourism, logistics and services.
Overall, Bahrain’s economic trajectory remains delicately balanced – marked by reform-driven progress yet tempered by fiscal constraint. But in threading this needle, Manama shows that cautious optimism can still be a powerful catalyst for change.

MEED’s December 2025 report on Bahrain includes:
> GVT & ECONOMY: Bahrain’s cautious economic evolution
> BANKING: Mergers loom over Bahrain’s banking system
> OIL & GAS: Bahrain remains in pursuit of hydrocarbon resources
> POWER & WATER: Bahrain advances utility reform
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Chinese firms expand oil and gas presence25 November 2025

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Chinese contractors have been present in the oil and gas projects market in the Middle East and North Africa (Mena) region since the turn of this century, but largely remained on the fringes. In a hydrocarbons market that has traditionally been dominated by European and American contractors, and those from Japan and South Korea, Chinese firms have become a rising force, especially since the start of the decade.Economic competitiveness in bid battles, significant improvement in engineering and technological capabilities and commitment to execution schedules have been primary factors behind the success of Chinese contractors in the regional oil and gas projects market since 2020.
Competitive edge
Traditionally, Chinese engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractors have enjoyed a lower cost base than their international competitors. This comes from lower manpower costs, access to cheaper materials and equipment, and financial support from state banks.
In addition, Chinese firms have typically had a different attitude to risk than many other contractors. Instead of seeking to turn a profit on specific projects, Chinese firms have entered markets cautiously and, as their knowledge of the local market grew, built a commanding long-term position.More recently, the edge that Chinese contractors enjoy has come from the technical experience they have gained from delivering large-scale, complex projects in their domestic market. While in the past Chinese contractors were only considered capable of delivering basic construction work, they now have some of the best project references in the world.
Regional leaders
Chinese EPC contractors have strengthened their performance in the Mena oil and gas projects market, particularly since the end of the Covid-19 pandemic. Since 2023, the combined value of projects won by Chinese firms has consistently remained well over $13bn, with them winning key contracts on major projects.
The largest EPC scheme under execution by a Chinese contractor in the region is on a project to maintain and increase the oil production potential of the Bul Hanine offshore oil field development in Qatar. China Offshore Oil Engineering Company won contracts worth $4bn for the two main EPC packages of the project in the third quarter of 2025.Also this year, Abu Dhabi’s Taziz awarded the main EPC contract to build a complex of specialty chemicals plants in the Taziz Industrial Chemicals Zone at Ruwais Industrial City to China National Chemical Engineering & Construction Corporation Seven (CC7).
The EPC contract is valued at $1.99bn, with work expected to be completed by Q4 2028. The chemicals cluster, known as Project Salt, will produce 1.9 million tonnes a year of marketable polyvinyl chloride (PVC), ethylene dichloride (EDC), vinyl chloride monomer (VCM) and caustic soda.
Chinese contractors have also enjoyed success in Saudi Arabia, with Aramco having awarded several key EPC contracts to Chinese firms since 2023. China Petroleum Engineering & Construction Company, Sepco and Sinopec Petroleum Services are executing EPC works on four out of the 17 packages of the third expansion phase of Aramco’s Master Gas System project.
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Just weeks after securing these EPC contracts, the consortium also won the contract to deliver the entire scope of work on the scheme’s third expansion phase, valued at $2.24bn.
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Work on the $2.52bn contract will be carried out by CPE’s engineering arm, China Petroleum Pipeline Engineering.
China has built up extensive resources, from skilled personnel to technical know-how. As the domestic market shows signs of slowing, these resources are being deployed internationally, supporting the growing presence of Chinese contractors in the Mena region.
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Ineco appointed for Spain-Morocco tunnel study25 November 2025
Spanish engineering firm Ineco has been commissioned to conduct an exploratory tunnel study to validate the feasibility of the railway connection linking Spain and Morocco.
According to reports in Spanish media, the $1m contract will establish a detailed technical roadmap for the project.
Ineco’s scope of work includes the preliminary design of the exploratory tunnel, revisions to previous studies, and a comprehensive update of the route, geology, geotechnical conditions, security systems, terminals and associated installations.
Ineco will validate the critical geological conditions of the Strait, particularly in the areas where the project’s greatest risks are located.
The study is expected to be completed by August next year.
The latest development comes after German company Herrenknecht completed its study in October. Herrenknecht said it found the project feasible to undertake due to the availability of the technology needed to execute it.
The media reports added that clients will further study the project and make a final decision in 2027 regarding tendering.
Recent developments
MEED reported in August that Ineco had secured an estimated €350,000 ($409,000) contract to carry out a financial feasibility study for the proposed infrastructure.
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The Spanish government revived the Morocco-Spain undersea rail link in June last year, after allocating about $2.5m for a renewed design study.
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Each single-track tunnel will have an inner diameter of 7.9 metres, while the service gallery will be 6 metres in diameter.
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UK firm wins Saudi airport masterplan update deal25 November 2025
UK-based engineering firm Mott MacDonald has won a contract from Saudi Arabia’s Matarat Holding to provide advisory services on long-term airport development and associated investment programmes.
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The contract duration is two years.
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Mott MacDonald will study future demand, facility capacity, land use, development alternatives, preferred plan selection and implementation strategies, including infrastructure upgrades.
The development of these airports is a vital part of the Saudi Aviation Strategy and Saudi Vision 2030, helping to drive economic development, tourism and regional connectivity.
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