Etihad WE tenders Fujairah independent water project

14 February 2025

Etihad Water & Electricity (Etihad WE), the UAE federal utility company, has announced successive tenders for the development of an independent water project (IWP) in the UAE northern emirate of Fujairah.

Etihad WE said it expects to receive bids by 17 and 18 February, respectively. It did not specify the capacity of the project or projects.

The invitations to bid said the client does not require bid or performance bonds. 

The public tender is open to "competent" UAE-registered companies that possess the necessary licence.

Water rehabilitation

Etihad WE has invested in building reverse osmosis (RO) technology-based water desalination plants to decarbonise the water production process, and plans to invest more. 

Yousif Al-Ali, Etihad WE’s chief executive, said new RO plants can reduce water production emissions by up to 60%, while replacing old water network infrastructure can further reduce emissions.

In May last year, MEED reported that Etihad WE had held a market-sounding event for an IWP in the UAE’s northern emirate of Ras Al-Khaimah.

The project is for the extension of an existing seawater reverse osmosis (SWRO) plant in Ghalilah, which became operational in 2015. 

Al-Ali told MEED in April last year that the final capacity of the Ghalilah plant extension was still being decided, although the potential capacity could range between 30 million imperial gallons a day (MIGD) and 90 MIGD.

US-based Aquatech constructed the first SWRO plant in Ghalilah, which has a water production capacity of 15 MIGD.

Water rehabilitation

Last month, Etihad WE announced the allocation of AED465m ($126m) for the rehabilitation of the water network across the UAE’s Northern Emirates, including AED214m for Ras Al-Khaimah.

Al-Ali added that “further significant funds” have been allocated to install approximately 120 electric vehicle (EV) chargers in Ras Al-Khaimah. This is part of an overall plan to build and provide up to 1,000 fast and accessible EV chargers across the UAE by 2030.

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Jennifer Aguinaldo
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    The Omani oil and gas sector, where large-scale, capital-intensive project investments are relatively rare, has been bolstered by progress on two major liquefied natural gas (LNG) developments.

    The government made headlines in July last year when it announced that majority state-owned Oman LNG would build a fourth train at its Qalhat LNG production complex in Sur.

    The new LNG train will have an output capacity of 3.8 million tonnes a year (t/y), increasing Oman LNG’s total capacity to 15.2 million t/y when it is commissioned in 2029.

    Oman LNG has recently made key progress on the expansion project, having shortlisted three bidders for the main engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract: a consortium of Chiyoda and South Korea’s Samsung C&T; Japanese contractor JGC Corporation; and a consortium comprising Italy’s Saipem and South Korea’s Daewoo Engineering & Construction.

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    TotalEnergies reportedly began an initial study on a potential second phase earlier this year. The French energy major may consider doubling the LNG complex’s capacity, although the plan has yet to be confirmed, according to sources.

    Earlier in the year, TotalEnergies appointed Technip Energies – already the main EPC contractor on the under-construction Marsa LNG terminal – to perform concept and feasibility studies on the proposed expansion phase.

    With Oman LNG advancing its fourth train and TotalEnergies assessing a potential doubling of LNG output, the sultanate is positioning itself to become a major global LNG player by 2030.

    Upstream pursuits

    Petroleum Development Oman (PDO), meanwhile, continues to advance projects aimed at maintaining and enhancing the sultanate’s oil and gas production capacity.

    PDO operates Block 6, Oman’s largest and most prolific hydrocarbons concession, spanning 75,119 square kilometres onshore and containing 202 oil fields and 43 gas fields.

    The government holds a 60% stake in PDO, with the remaining shares held by UK-based Shell (34%), France’s TotalEnergies (4%) and Thailand’s PTTEP (2%).

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    Kuwait-based Spetco International Petroleum Company won the design, build, own, operate and maintain (DBOOM) contract for the combined Budour-Tayseer sour gas processing facility.

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