Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Fujairah”
After Leaving OPEC, UAE's Fujairah Pipeline Could Break the High-Price Grip
When the United Arab Emirates announced its departure from OPEC, most commentary focused on the diplomatic rupture — the end of a decades-long alliance, the tension with Riyadh, the signal it sent about the cohesion of the Gulf producer bloc. But the more consequential story is infrastructural. The UAE already has a pipeline that changes everything.
The Habshan-Fujairah Pipeline: Built for Exactly This Moment
The Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline — running 400 kilometers from the onshore Habshan oil fields to the deepwater export terminal at Fujairah on the Gulf of Oman — was completed in 2012 and was always understood as a strategic hedge against Hormuz closure. It has a nameplate capacity of approximately 1.5 million barrels per day, with expansion potential that Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) has publicly targeted at 1.8 to 2 million barrels per day.
Fujairah: The Port That Exists Because of What Lies Upstream
Fujairah sits on the Gulf of Oman coast of the United Arab Emirates, on the far side of the Hajar Mountains from Dubai and Abu Dhabi. For most of its history it was the smallest and least developed of the seven emirates, with a fishing economy and a geography that made connection to the Emirati interior difficult. What transformed Fujairah was the recognition, by Abu Dhabi planners and international oil traders simultaneously, that a port on the Gulf of Oman side of the UAE was worth more than a port on the Arabian Gulf side because it lay outside the Strait of Hormuz. Its strategic value is a function of what it avoids.