Bahrain receives Hawar water package bids
23 August 2024
Bahrain's Electricity & Water Authority (EWA) has received bids from five companies for a contract to build a new seawater reverse osmosis (SWRO) desalination plant on Hawar Island.
The plant will consist of an SWRO facility with a capacity of 2-3 million imperial gallons a day (MIGD) of potable water, two 1 MIGD ground storage tanks and associated forwarding pumps.
The project is being implemented on an engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) basis.
The companies that submitted proposals for the contract are:
- Mohammed A Al-Kharafi & Sons for General Trading General Contracting (Kuwait)
- Alpha Energy Generations Company (local)
- Tecton Engineering & Construction (UAE)
- Almoayyed Contracting (local)
- China Machinery Engineering Corporation (China)
Earlier this year, EWA received bids for a contract to build two water storage tanks at Al-Hunaiynia and South Saar in Bahrain. Each tank will have a capacity of 10 million gallons.
Local contracting company Panorama Contracting & Engineering submitted the lowest bid of BD33.6 ($89.4m) for the contract.
The selected contractor will build the planned aluminium-cladded storage tanks, including the installation of solar panels for power generation.
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Contractors now have until June to submit offers, a source told MEED. Bidding had been expected to close on 30 April.
The upgraded facility will be capable of treating an additional sewage flow of 100,000 cubic metres a day (cm/d), with the expansion estimated to cost $300m.
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Located on a 670-hectare site in Jebel Ali, the original wastewater facility has a treatment capacity of about 675,000 cm/d following the completion of phase two in 2019, combining approximately 300,000 cm/d from phase one and 375,000 cm/d from phase two.
The main element of the expansion involves modifications to the secondary treatment process at Jebel Ali STP phase two.
UK-headquartered KPMG and UAE-based Tribe Infrastructure are serving as financial advisers on the project.
Future expansion
It is understood that the project is part of long-term plans to treat about 1.05 million cm/d once all future phases are completed.
According to sources, this includes a Jebel Ali-based build-operate-transfer (BOT) project to be developed under a public-private partnership (PPP) model.
It is understood that the prequalification process for this will begin in the coming months.
In February, MEED exclusively revealed that the municipality is preparing to tender the main construction package for the Warsan STP by the end of the year.
As MEED understands, the Warsan STP had previously been planned as a PPP project.
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UAE’s departure from Opec marks a tectonic shift29 April 2026
Commentary
Indrajit Sen
Oil & gas editorRegister for MEED’s 14-day trial access
The UAE’s decision to leave Opec and the Opec+ grouping marks a significant turning point in global oil markets and highlights shifting geopolitical dynamics and evolving supply expectations.
The UAE announced it will leave the producer alliance effective 1 May, ending nearly six decades of membership. The move reflects a broader strategic shift, as the country seeks greater flexibility over its production policy amid rising capacity and changing market conditions.
For oil markets, this is about more than one country wanting to pump more oil. Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc) has spent billions of dollars over the years to raise crude production capacity to 5 million barrels a day.
Opec+ quotas had increasingly looked as though they were stifling Abu Dhabi’s growing desire to maximise revenues by tapping into its expanded spare capacity. Leaving the Opec+ coalition gives Abu Dhabi more room to monetise those investments.
The timing also matters. It comes against a backdrop of regional security concerns, tensions around Iran and the Strait of Hormuz, and a sense that consumers are once again being squeezed by high energy costs and depleted strategic reserves.
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Kuwait Oil Company prepares to sign flowline contract29 April 2026

State-owned upstream operator Kuwait Oil Company (KOC) is preparing to sign a contract worth KD174.2m ($565m) with Kuwait-based Heavy Engineering Industries & Shipbuilding Company (Heisco), according to industry sources.
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One source said: “The contract is expected to be signed soon and everything associated with the contract award process is moving very smoothly.”
Heisco announced in a stock exchange statement earlier this month that it had received a formal contract award letter for the project.
While progress on the project is moving smoothly for now, the project may be impacted by fallout from the US and Israel’s war with Iran in the future.
The project requires a large volume of pipelines to be transported into Kuwait, which would normally be shipped through the Strait of Hormuz.
Heisco was the fourth-lowest bidder for the contract.
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Algerian-Indian team makes oil and gas discovery in Libya29 April 2026
A consortium of state-owned companies from India and Algeria has made an oil and gas discovery in Libya’s Ghadames basin.
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The discovery was made in the Area 95/96 block, which is located near Libya’s border with Algeria.
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The consortium won the exploration and production rights for the block, which covers an area of nearly 7,000 square kilometres, during Libya’s fourth oil and gas licensing round in December 2007.
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UAE and Saudi firms plan data centre projects in Saudi Arabia29 April 2026
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UAE-based firm Taranis Capital has signed a memorandum of understanding agreement with Saudi Arabia’s Emaar Executive Company to build several data centre facilities in the kingdom.
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