Chinese company to invest $481m in Iraq oil fields
18 June 2025
Register for MEED’s 14-day trial access
China’s Zhongman Petroleum has budgeted to invest $481m in two Iraqi oil fields, according to an announcement by the company.
It is planning to invest $264m in the first phase of developing Iraq's Middle Furat Oil Field (MF Block) and $217m in the first phase of developing the East Baghdad Field North Extension (EBN Block).
The funds will be invested in stages and used for old well rehabilitation, drilling, oil testing, surface engineering, oil and gas pipeline construction and reserve assessment.
The initial development plan for the MF and EBN blocks has been drafted and is awaiting approval by the project's joint management committee and Iraq's Petroleum Ministry.
Zhongman Petroleum won its bid for the development rights of the MF Block and EBN Block in May this year.
The MF block is located in the Najaf and Karbala provinces in central Iraq, covering an area of 1,073 square kilometres (sq km).
A total of 1,450 sq km of three-dimensional seismic exploration have been completed in the block, along with the drilling of six exploration wells. Four of the exploration wells resulted in commercial discoveries.
The EBN Block is located in Baghdad Province and covers an area of 231 sq km. All of the seven wells drilled in the block have hit oil and gas reserves.
The annual work plan and budget for the two blocks have been approved by Iraq's Oil Ministry. The first draft of the initial development plan has been completed and will be submitted for approval after it has been discussed and improved in collaboration with Iraq Central Oil Company.
Exclusive from Meed
-
Oman receives dams funding
18 June 2025
-
Serco wins Dubai Airports contract extension
18 June 2025
-
Egypt proceeds with wastewater work
18 June 2025
-
Chinese company to invest $481m in Iraq oil fields
18 June 2025
-
TotalEnergies wins Algeria oil and gas licence
18 June 2025
All of this is only 1% of what MEED.com has to offer
Subscribe now and unlock all the 153,671 articles on MEED.com
- All the latest news, data, and market intelligence across MENA at your fingerprints
- First-hand updates and inside information on projects, clients and competitors that matter to you
- 20 years' archive of information, data, and news for you to access at your convenience
- Strategize to succeed and minimise risks with timely analysis of current and future market trends

Related Articles
-
Oman receives dams funding
18 June 2025
The Islamic Development Bank (ISDB) has extended a $632m loan to the Ministry of Agricultural, Fisheries Wealth & Water Resources to fund the construction of four major flood protection dams in the sultanate.
The dam projects are:
- The Wadi Al-Khoud Flood Protection Dam (AK01) in Seeb
- The Wadi Rijma Flood Protection Dam (R2A) in Liwa
- The Wadi Majlas Flood Protection Dam in Qurayat
- The Wadi Ahin Flood Protection Dam in Saham North
Each of the dam schemes will be open to bids from both local and international contractors, although it is unclear at this stage when the tenders will be issued.
Separately, contractors are preparing to submit technical and commercial bids by 23 June for the ISDB-funded project to build two flood protection dams at Wadi Al-Ansab, called ANS-02 and ANS-03.
The estimated $80m contract involves the following scope of work for each dam:
- An embankment dam with geomembrane sealing at the upstream face
- A plinth at the upstream toe of the dam and plastic concrete cut-off wall at the foundation
- Curtain/consolidation/contact grouting works along the cut-off wall, plinth at the abutments, spillway ogee structure and bottom outlet
- A reinforced concrete spillway located at the left abutment and composed of approach channel, crest, chute and tailwater channel slabs and walls
- Shotcrete and slope stabilisation works for open excavations
- Bottom outlet system with intake tower, conduit, energy dissipation basin and access bridge to the intake tower
- Bottom outlet control gates
- Dam monitoring system
- Restitution works at the reservoir area
- Providing electricity supply for operation of the gates
- Access road, fencing and access gates
Potential bidders include:
- Strabag Oman
- Arab Contractors (Egypt)
- Serka Taahhut Insaat (Turkiye)
- Khimji Ramdas (local)
- Galfar (local)
- Sarooj Construction Company (local)
- Al-Jafar Contracting Company (Jordan)
READ THE JUNE 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDF
Gulf accelerates AI and data centre strategy; Baghdad keeps up project spending, but fiscal clouds gather; Banking stocks rise despite lower global oil prices
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the June 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA 1: Data centres churn investments> AGENDA 2: Gulf seizes AI opportunities> MEED TOP 100: Middle East stocks defy lower oil prices> SAUDI ARABIA: Riyadh confirms capital expenditure cuts> INTERVIEW: Mena crucial to Veolia’s growth plan> GULF PROJECTS INDEX: Gulf projects index leaps 4.3%> CONTRACT AWARDS: Region sees third month of weak awards activity> ECONOMIC DATA: Data drives regional projects> OPINION: Dealmaking trumps the Truman DoctrineTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/14091190/main.gif -
Serco wins Dubai Airports contract extension
18 June 2025
UK-based Serco has secured a AED495m ($135m) contract extension with Dubai Airports Company that will run until December 2030.
Under the terms of the agreement, Serco will continue to deliver guest experience services across all aspects of the passenger journey at both Dubai International airport (DXB) and Dubai World Central – Al-Maktoum International (DWC). The services include the deployment of guest experience ambassadors, passenger processing teams, traffic marshals, buggy drivers, chauffeurs and lounge hosts for VIP services.
Currently, more than 1,500 Serco employees are stationed at the airports, facilitating the movement of over 93 million passengers annually.
The five-year extension builds on a six-year partnership, with an initial five-year term and a subsequent one-year extension.
In 2020, MEED reported that Serco had won the contract to deliver hospitality and passenger processing services at DXB and DWC.
That contract required 1,000 employees to be on the ground to deliver the contract over the following five years, Serco said in a statement at the time.
In 2016, MEED reported that Dubai Airports Company had awarded Serco Middle East a six-year facilities management contract for Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 at DXB, as well as for other cargo and ancillary buildings.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/14088749/main1129.jpg -
Egypt proceeds with wastewater work
18 June 2025
Egypt’s Ministry of Housing, Utilities & Urban Communities, through the Construction Authority for Potable Water & Wastewater, has announced a general procurement notice for the fourth-phase design-build expansion of the giant Abu Rawash wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in Giza.
No official timeline has been given by the client for the issue of the request for proposals (RFP) for the project, but the tentative date for construction start is January 2026, with completion scheduled for June 2030.
The scheme has an official budget allocation of about €136m ($157m) and involves expanding the existing 1.6 million cubic-metre-a-day (cm/d) Abu Rawash plant with a further 400,000 cm/d of treatment capacity.
The additional capacity will be treated up to secondary treatment, with the treated wastewater discharged into the Barakat drainage system and then onto the Nile before entering the Mediterranean. By doing so, the irrigated land area will increase by about 29,000 acres, benefitting some 2 million people.
Abu Rawash is one of the world’s largest wastewater treatment complexes. Its 400,000 cm/d first phase was built in 1992. It was followed by phase 2 with a total capacity of 800,000 cm/d of primary-level treatment in 2010, before being upgraded to secondary treatment and expanded by 400,000 cm/d in 2022.
The latest expansion is being funded to the tune of €50m by the African Development Bank, with the remainder financed by the state.
In late May, a grouping of the local Hassan Allam Construction and UAE-headquartered Metito won an estimated $200m contract to upgrade and expand the Alexandria West WWTP.
Egypt is home to the world’s largest WWTP, the 7.5 million cm/d New Delta Irrigation plant completed in 2023, as well as the 5 million cm/d Bahr El-Baqr facility commissioned two years earlier.
READ THE JUNE 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDF
Gulf accelerates AI and data centre strategy; Baghdad keeps up project spending, but fiscal clouds gather; Banking stocks rise despite lower global oil prices
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the June 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA 1: Data centres churn investments> AGENDA 2: Gulf seizes AI opportunities> MEED TOP 100: Middle East stocks defy lower oil prices> SAUDI ARABIA: Riyadh confirms capital expenditure cuts> INTERVIEW: Mena crucial to Veolia’s growth plan> GULF PROJECTS INDEX: Gulf projects index leaps 4.3%> CONTRACT AWARDS: Region sees third month of weak awards activity> ECONOMIC DATA: Data drives regional projects> OPINION: Dealmaking trumps the Truman DoctrineTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/14088344/main.gif -
TotalEnergies wins Algeria oil and gas licence
18 June 2025
Register for MEED’s 14-day trial access
France’s TotalEnergies, in partnership with QatarEnergy, has been awarded the Ahara oil and gas licence in Algeria, in the North African country’s latest bidding round.
The licensing round, which was launched by Algeria’s National Agency for the Valorisation of Hydrocarbon Resources (Alnaft), is the country’s first using its latest hydrocarbons law, which was issued on 11 December 2019.
The Ahara licence covers an area of 14,900 square kilometres and is located at the intersection of the Berkine and Illizi basins.
TotalEnergies will serve as the operator during the exploration and appraisal phases of this licence, with a 24.5% effective interest, the same share as QatarEnergy (24.5%).
Algeria’s national oil and gas company Sonatrach will retain a majority interest of 51%, in accordance with Algerian law.
Patrick Pouyanne, the chairman and chief executive of TotalEnergies, said: ““TotalEnergies is delighted that its joint bid with QatarEnergy has led to the award of the Ahara licence, allowing us to write a new chapter in our long-lasting partnership with Sonatrach in exploration in Algeria.”
TotalEnergies is a long-standing player in the Algerian energy sector and is present in the country through its various subsidiaries.
The company is active in oil and gas exploration and production through its interests in the Tin Fouye Tabankort and Timimoun gas fields and the Berkine Basin oil fields (blocks 404a and 208), and in liquefied natural gas via supply contracts with Sonatrach.
The latest oil and gas licensing round is Algeria’s first in a decade, and is the first in a series of bidding rounds scheduled over five years.
The bid round offered opportunities at six sites:
- Mzaid
- Toual
- Ahara
- Reggane 2
- Zarafa 2
- Kern El-Kassa 2
Prior to the award of the Ahara licence to TotalEnergies and QatarEnergy, Algerian officials said that 41 companies had expressed interest in the licensing round.
Under Law 13-19, issued on 11 December 2019, Alnaft is responsible for establishing the criteria and rules for prequalifying investors and upstream operators for Algeria’s hydrocarbons sector.
The 2019 law replaced a previous law created in 2005, which governed the last bid round in 2014.
During the previous bid round, only four blocks were awarded out of the 31 offered.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/14084609/main.png -
GS Inima secures financing to build Oman PV plant
18 June 2025
Register for MEED’s 14-day trial access
Spanish water treatment company GS Inima has announced that it has secured financing to build a 6.3-megawatt peak (MWp) solar photovoltaic (PV) plant at the Barka 5 independent water project (IWP) in Oman.
The financing will be provided by Cofides, a Spanish public-private entity “that promotes the internationalisation and sustainability of companies by providing financing for investment projects”, GS Inima said in a statement.
GS Inima was selected as the owner-operator of the Barka 5 IWP in November 2020. The plant, which uses reverse osmosis technology to treat 100,000 cubic metres of water a day, was the company’s first project in the Middle East.
The Barka 5 IWP, which provides treated water to Oman’s Nama Power & Water Procurement Company (Nama PWP) to serve more than 800,000 people in the Muscat, Dakhiliyah and Batinah regions, reached commercial operations in June last year.
The planned solar PV facility, designed for self-consumption, will cover approximately 11% of Barka 5’s energy consumption until 2044. It will be built on a 40,000-square-metre area and will be designed, executed, operated and maintained by GS Inima.
“Integrating clean energy into infrastructures such as Barka 5 enables the optimisation of resource use, the reduction of the carbon footprint and progress towards a more environmentally friendly energy model,” GS Inima said in its statement.
Separately, GS Inima also recently announced achieving 1 million man-hours without lost time incidents at the under-construction Ghubrah 3 IWP project, which it is developing in a consortium with local contractor Sogex Oman and Saudi Arabia’s Aljomaih Energy & Water Company.
GS Inima is the leader of the consortium with a 52% stake in the Ghubrah 3 IWP project, while Aljomaih and Sogex Oman each hold a 24% interest.
The consortium reached financial close on the project in January this year. A group of international and local banks, including Export-Import Bank of South Korea (Kexim), UK-headquartered Standard Chartered and the local Bank Dhofar, agreed to provide $370m of project finance investment.
Nama PWP, the project’s offtaker, officially signed a contract to develop and operate the 300,000 cubic-metres-a-day desalination plant with the GS Inima-led consortium in May 2023, which was at least two years after the 20-year water-purchase agreement for the project was signed in 2021.
GS Inima is designing and building the Ghubrah 3 IWP facility in its capacity as the project’s engineering, procurement and construction contractor. The plant is expected to start commercial operations in the first quarter of 2027.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/14083608/main3229.jpg