Tabreed issues $190.6m green sukuk
5 March 2025
Abu Dhabi-based district cooling firm Tabreed has raised AED700m ($190.6m) via an inaugural, five-year green sukuk.
It is the first issuance under Tabreed’s new $1.5bn trust certificate issuance scheme.
The new sukuk will be listed and traded on the London Stock Exchange’s International Securities Market.
Strong institutional demand from local, regional and international investors led to the order books exceeding 4.3 times and the final issue being oversubscribed by nearly 2.6 times, the firm said on 5 March.
Tabreed priced the sukuk with a profit rate of 5.279%, achieving the “highest tightening by any investment grade regional sukuk issuance this year”.
This high demand was supported by investment grade credit ratings from Moody’s, which gave it a Baa3 rating, and Fitch, which gave it a BBB rating, consistent with Tabreed’s corporate ratings, the firm added.
Tabreed has been a regular issuer over the past 20 years. In 2006, its $200m sukuk was the first to be listed on the London Stock Exchange, which paved the way for other issuers to follow. That issuance was also the first rated sukuk by a corporate entity in the Middle East.
Proceeds from this latest sukuk will support Tabreed’s Green Financing Framework, which was first published in March 2022 and updated in February of this year.
Tabreed developed the framework based on the ICMA Green Bond Principles (GBP) 2021 and the Loan Market Association (LMA) Green Loan Principles (GLP) 2023.
A multidisciplinary management committee led by the group’s chief financial officer, Adel Al-Wahedi, governs the framework.
The net proceeds of the green bonds will be used to finance and refinance “eligible green projects”, which include Tabreed’s core business of constructing, acquiring and operating district cooling plants, as well as projects related to energy and water efficiency and wastewater management.
Main photo: Tabreed CEO Khalid Al-Marzooqi
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Local firm makes hydrocarbon discovery in Oman’s Block 714 April 2026
Omani oil and gas exploration and production company Masar Petroleum has announced a discovery in the Hasirah Ridge in the sultanate’s Block 7.
Masar Petroleum was the inaugural operator to appraise and produce hydrocarbons from the Hasirah reservoir in Block 7 in 2017.
Building on that experience, Masar Petroleum has now successfully drilled a new exploration well south of its existing discoveries, validating the concept of the Hasirah Ridge — a geological trend 5 kilometres wide and 30km long mapped across Block 7 using 2D seismic data.
This discovery represents the first step towards unlocking the Ridge’s prospective resource base of 100 million to 380 million barrels, Masar Petroleum said in a statement.
Following this discovery, a planned 3D seismic survey and exploration and appraisal programme is expected to advance the development of the new resources by the end of 2028.
First production from this field is expected to come on stream during the last quarter of this year.
Masar Petroleum plans to rapidly advance appraisal and development opportunities across Block 7.
“Masar is a proud Omani E&P company that has delivered significant value through a continuous and focused effort on unlocking our potential,” Abdulsattar AlMurshidi, CEO of Masar Petroleum, said.
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Bidders get more time for Saudi water transmission projects14 April 2026

Saudi Arabia’s Water Transmission Company (WTCO) has extended the bid submission deadlines for engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contracts for two major independent water transmission system projects.
The Jubail-Buraidah and Ras Mohaisen-Baha-Mecca transmission projects were first tendered last September under the public-private partnership model.
The deadlines for qualified contractors to submit technical and financial bids had initially been extended to March.
The new bid submission deadline for the Jubail-Buraidah project is 30 April.
Scheduled to begin construction in 2027, the scheme comprises an approximately 348-kilometre-long greenfield water transmission system with a capacity of 840,650 cubic metres a day (cm/d), delivering water from the Ashmasiah reservoirs to cities and towns in Al-Qassim province.
The project is large by WTCO standards. The company’s second phase of the Khobar-Hofuf system, completed in 2024, was 140km in length, with a capacity exceeding 530,000 cm/d.
Ras Mohaisen-Baha-Mecca
For the Ras Mohaisen-Baha-Mecca water transmission system project, the new bid submission deadline is 7 May.
The project involves constructing an approximately 325km-long greenfield independent water transmission system with a capacity of 542,000 cm/d, delivering water from Ras Mohaisen to the Adham and Aradhiyah regions.
Prequalification for both projects closed on 15 January.
It is understood that local firms Alkhorayef Water & Power Technologies and Mutlaq Al-Ghowairi Contracting Company (MGC) are among those qualified to bid for the Ras Mohaisen contract.
MGC secured the EPC contract for an even larger independent water transmission pipeline project in June last year.
The project, also linking Jubail and Buraidah, spans 587km and carries 650,000 cm/d.
According to regional project tracker MEED Projects, construction works recently commenced on the project, which is estimated to cost about SR8.5bn ($2.2bn).
WTCO is also planning to tender a contract for phase two of the Ras Mohaisen water transmission system project. This includes laying water transmission pipelines 408km in length with a capacity of 400,000 cm/d. This project is estimated to cost around $600m.
It is understood that the main contract tender will be issued in 2027.
READ THE APRIL 2026 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDFEconomic shock threatens long-term outlook; Riyadh adjusts to fiscal and geopolitical risk; GCC contractor ranking reflects gigaprojects slowdown.
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the April 2026 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
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Saudi firm wins $64.2m steel pipe orders from Aramco14 April 2026
Saudi Arabia-based Arabian Pipes Company has announced it has won orders from Saudi Aramco to supply steel pipes, totalling SR241m ($64.2m).
Under the terms of the contracts, Arabian Pipes Company will supply steel pipes over contract durations of nine months and 11 months, commencing from the date of signing.
“These contract awards reinforce Arabian Pipes Company’s strong position as a key supplier to the kingdom’s energy sector and highlight its continued commitment to supporting major oil and gas infrastructure projects in Saudi Arabia,” the company said in a filing with the Saudi Exchange (Tadawul), where its shares trade.
The company added that the orders will contribute positively to its financial performance over the contract period.
Arabian Pipes Company last secured a contract from Aramco in August 2024, when it won an eleven-month steel pipe supply order worth approximately $28.53m.
Prior to that, in July 2024, the company won a contract worth SR293m ($78.1m) to supply steel pipes for the second expansion phase of Aramco’s Jafurah unconventional gas development. That contract had a duration of 10 months.
The order was placed as a subcontract by Denys Arabia, the main contractor performing engineering, procurement and construction works on one of the Jafurah second expansion phase project packages.
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Spanish firm wins Saudi Landbridge design14 April 2026

Spanish engineering firm Typsa has won the lead design consultancy services contract for the long-planned Saudi Landbridge railway network.
Saudi Arabia Railways (SAR) issued the tender in April last year. It included concept design and options development for the preliminary and Issued for Construction (IFC) design stages of the network, as MEED reported.
The estimated SR100bn ($27bn) project comprises more than 1,500km of new track. The core component is a 900km new railway between Riyadh and Jeddah, which will provide direct freight access to the capital from King Abdullah Port on the Red Sea.
Other key sections include upgrading the existing Riyadh-Dammam line, a bypass around the capital called the Riyadh Link, and a link between King Abdullah Port and Yanbu.
The Saudi Landbridge is one of the kingdom’s most anticipated project programmes. Plans to develop it were first announced in 2004, but put on hold in 2010 before being revived a year later. Key stumbling blocks were rights-of-way issues, route alignment and its high cost.
In January, SAR said it would deliver the Saudi Landbridge project through a "new mechanism" by 2034, after failing to reach an agreement with a Chinese consortium to construct it.
In an interview with local media, SAR CEO Bashar Bin Khalid Al-Malik said the consortium failed to meet local content requirements, and the project would now be delivered in several phases through a different procurement model.
In December 2023, MEED reported that a team comprising US-based Hill International, Italy’s Italferr and Spain’s Sener had been awarded the contract to provide project management services for the programme.
If it proceeds, the Saudi Landbridge will be one of the largest railway projects ever undertaken in the Middle East and among the biggest globally.
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Trump insider key in brokering Libya budget deal14 April 2026
Commentary
Wil Crisp
Oil & gas reporterMassad Boulos, the father-in-law of Donald Trump’s youngest daughter and an adviser to the US president, is being credited by many Libyans as being instrumental in brokering the country’s recent budget agreement.
The Central Bank of Libya confirmed on 11 April that the country’s rival legislative bodies had approved a unified state budget for the first time in more than 13 years.
The budget is valued at LD190bn ($29.95bn), with LD12bn ($1.9bn) allocated to the country’s National Oil Corporation (NOC), and LD40bn ($6.3bn) allocated for “development projects”.
After the Central Bank’s announcement, Boulos posted on social media, stating that he had called the Prime Minister of Libya’s Government of National Unity, Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, to congratulate him on the deal.
In his social media post, the Lebanese-American businessman said that during the call, they discussed “the vital role of the National Oil Corporation in maintaining and expanding oil and gas production”.
Boulos was appointed as the US president’s senior adviser for Arab and African affairs in January last year and first travelled to Libya in July the same year, when he met with leaders from both of the country’s rival legislatures.
Since his first trip, he has ramped up US diplomatic activity in the country and held meetings in Tripoli and Benghazi during January of this year.
In February, speaking at a UN Security Council session on Libya, he said that the US was ‘‘working on concrete steps for economic and military integration by bringing together senior officials from eastern and western Libya”.
During the same session, which took place less than two months ago, the head of the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL), Hanna Tetteh, said: ‘‘Regrettably, there has been no meaningful progress between the House of Representatives (HoR) and the High Council of State (HCS) in completing the first two steps of the roadmap, despite UNSMIL’s efforts’’.
Many Libyans credit Boulos’ ability to secure compromises from both of Libya’s legislatures to his decision to deviate from the UN roadmap, which focuses on moving towards a new round of elections to create a unified government.
One source said: “The priority of the US in Libya isn’t holding elections; it’s doing commercial deals that the US can benefit from – especially in the oil sector.
“The timing of this latest budget deal isn’t accidental. Right now, the US is desperate to bring new oil and gas production online in order to help lower global oil prices.
“Forging a deal between the HoR and the HCS is a great way of bringing large volumes of crude onto the market in a relatively short timeframe.”
Donald Trump is coming under increasing pressure domestically due to high oil prices after partnering with Israel in his war against Iran, which started on 28 February.
As a result of the conflict, global markets are losing 11 million barrels a day (b/d) of oil supply due to the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
On top of this, 20% of the world’s LNG production cannot be shipped.
The energy crunch has caused prices to spike and sent countries that are dependent on imported oil and gas scrambling to secure new supplies.
Libya has Africa’s largest oil reserves and has the potential to produce much more than its current 1.43 million barrels a day.
One of the central reasons NOC has struggled to bring new production online over recent years has been the ongoing political gridlock over the country’s budget.
Now, many Libyans are expecting hundreds of projects across all sectors to start moving forward in the country.
The budget approval has sparked a surge of optimism about potential development and economic growth, but the country’s political and security situation remains fragile.
It remains to be seen whether the pragmatic dealmaking of Boulos will lead to long-term stability.
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