Bahrain 2025 country profile and databank

24 December 2024

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MEED Editorial
Related Articles
  • Liquidity constraints force corporate banking shift

    5 February 2025

    Corporate lenders face a liquidity crunch as businesses struggle to maintain cash flow amid rising costs and tighter credit conditions. Credit constraints have worsened, with 5% of middle-market borrowers now heavily leveraged and unable to refinance, according to credit rating firm KBRA. At the same time, rising fraud and outdated payment infrastructures are compounding the liquidity challenge.

    Payment fraud losses are expected to reach $26.4bn by 2028, according to GlobalData, making cash flow forecasting even more unpredictable. Increasing cyber threats, unauthorised fund transfers and fraudulent transactions directly impact liquidity buffers, forcing businesses to enhance treasury functions.

    Slow settlement cycles and outdated infrastructure continue to choke liquidity, restricting businesses’ ability to manage cash flow. To stay competitive, lenders must rethink their support for corporate clients by ensuring faster access to funds, smarter risk controls and seamless financial integration.

    The pressure to deliver faster, more secure and smarter financial solutions is increasing. Innovations such as real-time payments (RTPs), artificial intelligence (AI)-driven risk models and embedded finance address these needs by enhancing liquidity management, improving credit allocation and streamlining cross-border transactions. Lenders that fail to adapt risk losing corporate clients to more agile competitors.

    ENTRIES CLOSING SOON: MENA Banking Excellence Awards 2025: Corporate & Investment

    AI reshapes liquidity strategy

    AI is transforming liquidity management, shifting from a compliance and fraud detection tool to a key driver of treasury optimisation. Lenders are using AI-powered forecasting to improve treasury operations, helping businesses anticipate cash flow needs, automate funding decisions and optimise capital allocation.

    HSBC’s AI-driven treasury solutions have improved forecasting accuracy by 92%, reducing liquidity risk for businesses operating across multiple markets. JP Morgan has also adopted AI-driven liquidity forecasting, enabling clients to optimise cash reserves and enhance working capital efficiency.

    AI optimises liquidity management while strengthening security, helping lenders counter fraud and financial crime in an increasingly digital landscape. Lenders are leveraging AI’s predictive power to detect anomalies and security threats before they escalate.

    Fraud detection remains a key priority as financial crime becomes more sophisticated. Many lenders are deploying AI to enhance fraud detection and risk mitigation. For instance, Mastercard and Stripe use AI-driven risk models, analysing over 1,000 transaction data points per second to detect fraud in real time.

    Integrating AI into treasury services not only enhances operational efficiency but also positions lenders as strategic partners, offering data-driven insights that strengthen corporate client relationships.

    Real-time payments drive liquidity optimisation

    RTPs are now central to working capital strategies, not just a speed upgrade. Corporate clients increasingly expect instant settlements and real-time liquidity visibility as standard banking features.

    The global RTP market is projected to surpass $700tn by 2028, according to GlobalData, as demand grows for seamless cross-border transactions, reduced credit dependency and faster cash conversion cycles. This shift is critical for treasury and finance teams, which require greater control over cash positions to navigate fluctuating market conditions.

    Payment infrastructure providers such as Swift GPI and Visa B2B Connect have already streamlined high-value international transactions, reducing settlement times from days to minutes. These advancements are reshaping corporate banking priorities, with lenders expected to embed real-time payment capabilities within their broader treasury services.

    ENTRIES CLOSING SOON: MENA Banking Excellence Awards 2025: Corporate & Investment

    Embed finance or lose relevance

    Corporate banking is shifting away from traditional, bank-led services as embedded finance transforms how businesses access payments, liquidity and credit directly within their operational platforms. By integrating financial products within enterprise platforms and enterprise resource planning (ERP) software, companies reduce dependence on external bank portals.

    GlobalData forecasts that corporate embedded finance will exceed $7tn by 2030, driven by demand for frictionless cash flow management, instant access to financing and automated treasury functions. Businesses are embedding banking services within their digital ecosystems, integrating payments, lending and cash management into their core platforms.

    Major banks are already adapting. Goldman Sachs and Citi have developed embedded lending and treasury tools that integrate directly into ERP systems, enabling businesses to initiate payments, access credit and manage liquidity without switching platforms.

    Banks that fail to embed financial solutions risk losing visibility over corporate transactions. Institutions that successfully integrate embedded finance into their offerings will strengthen corporate relationships and secure long-term revenue streams. Conversely, delaying digital integration may result in businesses managing financial operations independently within their own platforms, reducing banks’ role in liquidity management.

    How lenders must adapt to the liquidity shift

    The future of corporate banking is being shaped by AI-driven treasury solutions, real-time payments and embedded finance—all of which are rapidly transitioning from competitive advantages to industry standards.

    For banking leaders, this shift demands immediate action.

    Corporate clients are no longer just looking for lenders – they need strategic partners who can provide seamless liquidity management, intelligent forecasting and embedded financial solutions.

    Banks that embrace these innovations will strengthen corporate relationships, drive new revenue models and maintain relevance in a shifting financial landscape. Those that hesitate risk being replaced by more agile, tech-driven competitors offering faster, smarter and more integrated financial services.

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    Sarah Rizvi
  • Read the February 2025 MEED Business Review

    5 February 2025

    Download / Subscribe / 14-day trial access

    Donald Trump’s return to the US presidency on 20 January 2025 is anticipated to have profound impacts on the Middle East. In the February issue of MEED Business Review, we provide an in-depth look at the major geopolitical challenges that the region presents, particularly in terms of US relations with Iran, and the interrelationship between the US, Israel and other regional actors. 

    What's more, we examine how the Trump 2.0 administration's focus on areas such as artificial intelligence (AI) regulation, data sovereignty and cryptocurrency – not to mention the ever-escalating US-China tech war – offers an opportunity for Middle East players to assert themselves in the global tech economy. Trump’s America First policies could slow the region’s AI ambitions, however, and to stay competitive, GCC states must step up investments in education, infrastructure and innovation.

    Indeed, for the UAE, investing in and developing AI infrastructure and applications is now a priority. Abu Dhabi recently launched a $6bn project that combines 5,200MW of solar and 19 gigawatt-hours of battery energy storage capacity to deliver 1,000MW of round-the-clock renewable power capacity, which will help to support the government's AI ambitions. 

    Our latest issue also includes a comprehensive report on the GCC's water and wastewater sector, where Riyadh-headquartered utility developer and investor Acwa Power has improved its lead as the pace of independent water project contract awards slows.

    This month’s exclusive 15-page market report focuses on Qatar. Doha has played an instrumental role in negotiations between Israel and Hamas in recent months, placing it front and centre of regional mediation, while efforts to ensure post-World Cup economic progress led to a strong project awards performance for the country in 2024.

    In this issue, the team also examines how the long-awaited ceasefire in Gaza has brought relief to the fraught situation in Palestine; finds that the appointment of jurist Nawaf Salam as prime minister holds the prospect of political and economic rehabilitation for Lebanon; and looks at how the development of Wynn's integrated resort in Ras Al-Khaimah is supporting an ongoing boom in the emirate's real estate sector.

    The February issue is packed with exclusive insight, too. Omran’s CEO Hashil Al-Mahrouqi explains how the agency's tourism development and hospitality projects will support Oman's Vision 2040; we round up the record signings that made 2024 the best year yet for contract awards in the region; and the latest edition of MEED's Economic Activity Index reveals that the UAE is maintaining its edge as 2025 gets under way.

    We hope our valued subscribers enjoy the February 2025 issue of MEED Business Review

     

    Must-read sections in the February 2025 issue of MEED Business Review include:

    AGENDA: 
    Trump 2.0 targets technology
    Trump’s new trial in the Middle East
    > Unlocking AI’s carbon conundrum

    > CURRENT AFFAIRS:
    Gaza ceasefire goes into effect

    New Lebanese PM raises political hopes

    INDUSTRY REPORT:
    Water and wastewater
    > Acwa Power improves lead as IWP contract awards slow
    Water projects require innovation

    > INTERVIEW: Omran’s tourism strategies help deliver Oman 2040 

    > PROJECT RECORDS2024 breaks all project records

    > REAL ESTATE: Ras Al-Khaimah's robust real estate boom continues

    > ACTIVITY INDEX: UAE maintains regional economic edge

    > QATAR MARKET REPORT: 
    > COMMENT: Doha works to reclaim spotlight
    > GOVERNMENT & ECONOMY: Qatar economy rebounds alongside diplomatic activity
    > BANKING: Qatar banks look to calmer waters in 2025
    > UPSTREAM: QatarEnergy strives to raise gas and oil production capacity
    > DOWNSTREAM: Qatar chemicals projects take a step forward
    > POWER & WATER: Facility E award jumpstarts Qatar’s utility projects
    > CONSTRUCTION: Qatar construction shows signs of recovery

    MEED COMMENTS: 
    > Damac founder Sajwani puts America first with Trump’s second presidency

    > Dubai’s largest-ever contract award is vital for its future
    AI underpins 5GW Abu Dhabi solar project
    Saudi-Turkiye relationship could bolster projects market

    > GULF PROJECTS INDEX: Gulf projects market enters 2025 in state of growth

    > DECEMBER 2024 CONTRACTS: Monthly haul cements record-breaking total for 2024

    > ECONOMIC DATA: Data drives regional projects

    > OPINIONBetween the extremes as spring approaches

    BUSINESS OUTLOOK: Finance, oil and gas, construction, power and water contracts

    To see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click here
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    MEED Editorial
  • OCP green ammonia plant approaches construction

    5 February 2025

    Moroccan phosphate specialist OCP is in advanced stages of studying a project to produce 1 million tonnes of green ammonia annually by 2027.

    The planned facility, which will cater to export markets, will include a 200,000 tonnes-a-year (t/y) green hydrogen production plant and 4,000MW of renewable energy plants.

    It will also include an electrolyser plant with a capacity of 2,000MW.

    The project will be executed in two phases across two locations, according to Samir Rachidi, director-general at Iresen, who presented at the ongoing Mena World Hydrogen summit in Dubai.

    "OCP is conducting advanced studies, and currently testing 10-megawatt electrolysers," Rachidi said.

    At least seven other green hydrogen or ammonia projects are under study or pre-front-end engineering design stage in the North African state.

    In April 2023, a team led by China Energy International Construction Group signed a memorandum of cooperation to develop a green hydrogen project in a coastal area in southern Morocco.

    A year earlier, Serbia-headquartered renewables developer and investor CWP Global appointed US firm Bechtel to support developing large-scale green hydrogen and ammonia facilities in Morocco and Mauritania.

    The Amun green hydrogen project, which CWP Global plans to develop in Morocco, is understood to require 15GW of renewable energy, and has an estimated budget of between $18bn and $20bn.

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    Jennifer Aguinaldo
  • Oman eyes first green hydrogen offtake this year

    5 February 2025

    One of the consortiums that won Oman's green hydrogen land block auctions is expected to reach an offtake agreement sometime this year.

    "We are expecting to announce an offtake agreement hopefully sometime this year," said Rumaitha Al-Busaidi, business development manager at Hydrogen Oman (Hydrom), the main orchestrator of Oman's green hydrogen programme.

    Hydrom has signed land concession agreements with teams led by Denmark's Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners, South Korea's Posco and France's Engie, Japan's Marubeni, France's EDF, and a team comprising London-based Actis and Australia's Fortescue in the first two rounds of its land auctions.

    Oman has also signed what it refers to as legacy projects with other teams led by Belgium's Deme, BP and Shell.

    A long-term offtake agreement for the products produced by these facilities is the main requirement for the projects to reach financial investment decision (FID), which the majority of the consortiums aim to achieve by 2027, except for the Deme-led Hyport Duqm, which aims to reach FID in 2026.

    Al-Busaidi also said they expect to launch the third round of Oman's green hydrogen land auctions before the end of the first quarter of 2025. 

    They are fine-tuning the next auction process and considering several options including one similar to the first two auctions, where land parcels were auctioned for the production of green hydrogen and derivatives including ammonia, methanol and sustainable aviation fuels, among others.

    The other option being considered is auctioning land parcels for downstream industries that offtake green hydrogen and its derivatives including green steel, fertilisers and other sectors.

    A final option is a so-called double-sided auction to facilitate contracts between domestic green hydrogen producers and downstream offtakers.

    In December, MEED reported that Oman was making good progress compared to other states in the Middle East and North Africa (Mena) region that are looking to establish green hydrogen hubs to help decarbonise key industries in fossil fuel-scarce jurisdictions globally.

    "We are doing very well," Abdulaziz Al-Shidhani, managing director of Hydrogen Oman (Hydrom), told MEED, noting that Oman has signed legally binding, 47-year project development agreements with eight consortiums under the Hydrom public auction and its legacy programme. 

    Each consortium is understood to have aligned with the sultanate's goal of having a green hydrogen production capacity of 1.4 million tonnes a year (t/y) by 2030 by committing to deliver a capacity of 150,000 t/y by the end of the decade.

    Alternative derivatives

    Hydrom is exploring liquid hydrogen collaboration with another European-based entity, the Port of Amsterdam, to deliver liquid hydrogen to the Netherlands and other perceived demand centres in Europe, as well as to markets in Asia – primarily Japan, South Korea and Singapore.

    While most of the project development agreements signed by Hydrom and the developer consortiums expect ammonia to be the primary derivative, Al-Shidhani says liquid hydrogen has recently been emerging as a viable alternative, with potential uses for the product including applications in the mobility sector and as a maritime fuel.

    "Developers and end-users are exploring all technologies and assessing the feasibility of other alternative derivatives," he says. He adds that cracking ammonia back to hydrogen, as originally envisaged by most projects, involves high costs.

    Creating local demand

    While the assumed markets for the output of the planned multibillion-dollar projects in Dhofra and Duqm are overseas, Oman's long-term objective includes attracting foreign direct investments in the entire green hydrogen supply chain, including solar and wind turbine production and manufacturing.

    "We will enable the platform to foster a sustainable supply chain and it will be up to the private sector to determine suitable strategies, which we are assuming will be export-focused in the early phases of the projects," Al-Shidhani says.

    MEED understands that the 2030 green hydrogen production target will require up to $50bn of investment, including 18GW of electrolyser capacity and 35GW of renewable energy capacity.

     

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  • Egypt approves Russian nuclear financing amendment

    4 February 2025

    The Egyptian House of Representatives has approved a report, previously ratified by the North African nation's Energy & Environment Committee, that amends the government financing agreement between Egypt and Russia over the El-Dabaa nuclear power plant in Matrouh.

    The agreement secures a government export loan from Moscow to support the construction of Egypt’s first nuclear power plant.

    According to a local media report, the decree was reviewed by a joint committee that included members of the Energy & Environment Committee, as well as representatives from the Planning & Budget, Economic Affairs and Foreign Relations Committees.

    The amendments to the financing agreement aim to "align the loan's terms with the project's implementation schedule".

    The report did not disclose the nature of the financing amendment that has been approved.

    Financing details

    Egypt and Russia signed the initial inter-governmental agreement for the North African state’s first nuclear facility in November 2015.

    MEED understands that the existing agreement entails an 85:15 project financing split between Russia and Egypt.

    The project is expected to cost between $25bn and $30bn.

    According to industry sources, the funds Russia is providing are payable over 22 years in 43 semi-annual installments, with the first installment due on 15 October 2029.

    MEED understands Egypt can repay the loan in US dollars or Egyptian pounds, whichever suits the Russian party better, and that "a very affordable" 3% annual interest rate applies.  

    The power plant will be equipped with four Russian-designed, 1,200MW VVER reactor units.

    When complete, the El-Dabaa nuclear power plant is expected to generate more than 10% of electricity production in Egypt.

    The plant’s first reactor is scheduled to be operational in 2026.

    Russia’s State Atomic Energy Corporation (Rosatom), the project’s main contractor, announced that it started the production of electrical components in Saint Petersburg for a reactor vessel for the plant in June 2022.

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    Jennifer Aguinaldo