Kuwait makes major leadership changes at state-owned oil company
3 April 2024
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Kuwait has announced that Wadha Ahmed Al Khateeb, CEO of Kuwait National Petroleum Company (KNPC), will serve as the acting CEO of Kuwait Integrated Petroleum Industries Company (Kipic) in a move expected to accelerate the merger of the two companies.
Last year, the US-based business magazine Forbes named Al Khateeb the sixth most powerful businesswoman in the Middle East.
Al Khateeb became CEO of KNPC in November 2022, overseeing 6,270 employees.
She has almost 30 years of experience in the oil sector and was deputy CEO at the Mina Abdullah Refinery before becoming CEO of KNPC.
Al Khateeb has replaced Waleed Al Bader, who led the company since 2021.
While Al Bader was CEO, Kipic brought the Al Zour refinery online in late 2022. The Gulf Arab state became a major exporter of refined products, especially very low sulphur fuel oil used in shipping.
Al Bader had previously served as chief executive of KNPC, which he left in 2022 when Al Khateeb replaced him.
Al Khateeb is not the only newly announced appointee at Kipic who already has a leadership position at KNPC.
Bandar Al Qahtani, the deputy CEO of administration and commercial at KNPC, has been named the acting deputy CEO of administration and commercial at Kipic.
Additionally, Khaled Ali Essa Al Khayyat, the deputy CEO of planning and finance at KNPC, has been named the acting deputy CEO of planning and finance at Kipic.
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President Trump indicated that the decision followed the submission of a 10-point plan from Tehran. He said the plan is a “workable basis on which to negotiate”. He further stated that US military objectives under Operation Epic Fury had already been “met and exceeded” during the 38-day campaign. He also showed optimism for a peace deal, adding that “it is an Honor to have this long-term problem close to resolution”.
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Adnoc builds long-term oil and gas production potential7 April 2026

Between 2023 and 2024, Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc Group) spent an estimated $37bn on projects critical to achieving its upstream targets: increasing oil production capacity to 5 million barrels a day (b/d) by 2027 and attaining gas self-sufficiency by the end of the decade.
The state energy company spent more than $22.5bn in 2023 alone, marking the highest annual oil and gas project spending on record in the UAE. The Hail and Ghasha sour gas development – accounting for approximately $17bn – remains the single-largest contract award in the country’s hydrocarbons sector.
A slowdown in capital expenditure (capex) following two years of elevated spending is therefore in line with expectations. While engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract awards for upstream projects declined in 2025 and into this year, Adnoc has still committed close to $10bn over the past 15 months.
The largest award during this period came from Adnoc Offshore, which let contracts worth $7.5bn for three EPC packages under the Lower Zakum Long-Term Development Plan (LTDP-1). Spain’s Tecnicas Reunidas and Abu Dhabi-based NMDC Energy and Target Engineering Construction Company were selected last February to execute the works.
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Offshore contracts in 2026
So far this year, Adnoc Offshore has awarded contracts for two key projects: the Satah Al-Razboot (Sarb) deep gas development and the expansion of the Nasr oil field.
Adnoc achieved final investment decision (FID) on the Sarb project in January and awarded the main EPC contract to US-based McDermott International. The contract is estimated to be worth around $500m, sources told MEED.
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Contractor wins Oman housing substation contract7 April 2026
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The tender was announced last November, with the bid envelopes opened on 16 December 2025.
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