UAE fast-tracks crude pipeline as Strait of Hormuz disruption hits global oil flows

Hormuz-bypass crude pipeline halfway complete and set for 2027, as Iran’s blockade disrupts shipping; Al Jaber warns oil flows may take at least four months after ceasefire to recover to 80% of prewar levels

The UAE's new crude pipeline bypassing the Strait of Hormuz is about 50% complete, the head of ADNOC said ​on Wednesday, adding that global oil flows may take at least four months to recover to 80% of pre-conflict levels after the Iran ‌war ends.
Tehran has largely kept the waterway critical for global oil and gas supplies shut to all ships other than its own since U.S.-Israeli strikes on February 28, sending energy prices and inflation surging and fanning fears of an economic downturn.
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UAE ruler Mohammed bin Zayed
UAE ruler Mohammed bin Zayed
UAE ruler Mohammed bin Zayed
(Photo: Reuters)
The Abu Dhabi Media Office revealed the existence of the new West-East Pipeline project last week, saying Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed directed ​state-owned oil giant ADNOC to fast-track its construction in order to double export capacity via the port of Fujairah by 2027.
"Today, it's already almost 50% ​complete, and we are accelerating its delivery toward 2027," Sultan Al Jaber said during a live-streamed Atlantic Council event, among his ⁠most extensive public remarks since the war began.
"Right now, too much of the world's energy still moves through too few choke points. That is exactly why the ​UAE made the decision more than a decade ago to invest in infrastructure that bypasses the Strait of Hormuz."
The existing Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline (ADCOP), which carries up ​to 1.8 million barrels per day, has proved crucial as the UAE seeks to maximise exports from the Gulf of Oman coast just outside the Strait.
Iran, which has attacked vessels to assert control over the Strait, has expanded its definition of the waterway to include the UAE's Gulf of Oman coastline. The U.S. has imposed its own blockade on Iranian ports and attempted an ​aborted operation to reopen the chokepoint.

UAE targeted

The UAE was targeted by more than 3,000 missiles and drones aimed at civilian infrastructure, including ADNOC's, where damage assessment is ongoing and full operational capacity could take ‌weeks to ⁠months in some cases, Al Jaber said.
"The UAE was attacked for its model of development," he said.
Even if the conflict ended tomorrow, Al Jaber warned that pre-conflict flows through the Strait would not return fully before the first or second quarter of 2027.
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Strait of Hormuz
Strait of Hormuz
Strait of Hormuz
(Photo: ynet)
"Once you accept that a single country can hold the world's most important waterway hostage, freedom of navigation as we know it is just finished," he said.
"If we don't defend this principle today, we will spend the next decade defending against the ​consequences."

"Co-investors"

The exit was a "sovereign, strategic decision" driven by a global need for more energy, Al Jaber said, stressing it was "not aimed at anyone" and "not intended to rupture any relationship".
He ​warned the global sector remains dangerously under-invested, noting current upstream investment of around $400 billion a year barely offsets natural decline ​rates. Global spare crude ⁠capacity, currently around 3 million bpd, needs to be closer to 5 million bpd, he added.
Looking forward, AI will strain global grids and the world is underestimating how energy-intensive the revolution will be, Al Jaber said.
"In many ways, the AI race is an electron race," he said, noting that the speed of AI-driven decision-making can be the difference between ⁠continuity and ​disruption during a crisis.
Al Jaber reiterated the UAE's commitment to investing heavily in the U.S., adding ​ADNOC, its international arm XRG and renewables investor Masdar, where Al Jaber is chairman, already have investments worth $85 billion across 19 states.
"The UAE and the United States are not just trading partners. We are co-investors ​in the economy of the next century," he said.
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