Capital Letter is Frank Kane’s new weekly series on Abu Dhabi’s money, power and ambition
International media covering Abu Dhabi’s economic landscape tends to focus on the big ticket deals in artificial intelligence, data centres and tech partnerships struck in the gleaming towers of Al Maryah and the Corniche.
But behind all of that sits a single, unglamorous, indispensable fact: Abu Dhabi still runs on oil and gas – and will for a long time yet. The war that closed the Strait of Hormuz for the better part of three months proved the point with uncomfortable precision.
When the export revenues of the national oil champion Adnoc were disrupted, the entire economic edifice suffered. Diversification cushioned the blow, but did not entirely absorb it.
What makes the story genuinely interesting is not the importance of the hydrocarbon sector – every Gulf state shares that – but how Adnoc has used its natural resource windfall.
Over the past decade, under a mandate from Abu Dhabi’s leadership to modernise, it has transformed itself from a conventional state oil company focused simply on extraction and export into something much more sophisticated.
The numbers tell the story. Since 2016, Adnoc has mobilised $65 billion through joint ventures, infrastructure partnerships, equity listings and debt markets.
It has taken six subsidiaries public, building an aggregate market capitalisation of around $150 billion, accounting for a fifth of all trading on the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange, and close to 40 percent of annual dividend distributions.
Adnoc’s listed companies have delivered total shareholder returns exceeding 100 percent since their IPOs, and the annual dividend payout across the group now exceeds $7 billion.
These are not the numbers of a state oil company, but of a global listed major that happens to be wholly anchored in sovereign ownership.
The architecture behind this, as a recent Gulf Intelligence assessment makes clear, was carefully constructed. Adnoc separated sovereign ownership from operational risk, imposed public-market discipline at subsidiary level, and built a funding stream – minority listings, hybrid structures, infrastructure monetisation – designed to raise and recycle capital without diluting control.
The result is a financial engine capable of funding a $150 billion capital programme through to 2030, targeting 5 million barrels per day by 2027, while simultaneously bankrolling adventures well beyond the oilfield.
The relationship between molecules and money is central to the Abu Dhabi model. At ADGM on Al Maryah Island you will find the offices of Adnoc Global Trading, one of two Adnoc trading arms incorporated inside Abu Dhabi’s global financial hub.
This places Adnoc’s commercial operations inside the same common-law, internationally recognised jurisdiction that hosts Goldman Sachs, Citibank and BlackRock. It is a statement about how Abu Dhabi thinks about the relationship between its energy revenues and its financial ambitions.
The AI dimension reinforces the synergy. For example, Adnoc, Masdar, XRG and Microsoft have a strategic alliance in which Masdar supplies the clean energy that powers Microsoft’s data centres, and Microsoft’s AI optimises Adnoc’s operations.
In this and other ventures, oil funds the infrastructure that runs the algorithms that make oil production more efficient and profitable.
Adnoc’s distributed ownership model, with its web of public listings and aligned incentives, is well suited to the kind of international partnership Abu Dhabi is now pursuing at scale.
Consider XRG, Adnoc’s international lower-carbon energy and chemicals investment company, launched in November 2024 with an enterprise value of $80 billion and a mandate to more than double that within a decade. Within a year it had nearly already done so, reaching $150 billion.
This is oil revenue being systematically redeployed across the global economy, and is only set to grow as the UAE is freed from the restraints of Opec membership.
The Fujairah bypass pipelines – one running at capacity, with two more in the construction and planning phase – reinforce the point that Abu Dhabi capital is being deployed in the long-term national strategic interest.
More than a decade ago, Sheikh Mohamed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, then crown prince, now president of the UAE, asked: “In 50 years, when we might have the last barrel of oil, the question is: when it is shipped abroad, will we be sad?”
His own answer was unambiguous: “If we are investing today in the right sectors, I can tell you we will celebrate at that moment.”
A decade on, the investment is increasingly into AI, technology and all things digital. But the vehicle delivering that strategy is still oil-fuelled.
Frank Kane is Editor-at-Large of AGBI and an award-winning business journalist


