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Musabbeh Al Kaabi CEO, Petroleum and Petrochemicals, Mubadala Investment Company Image Credit: Ahmed Kutty/Gulf News

Abu Dhabi: Abu Dhabi’s state fund is looking to expand its energy investments, with $5 billion (Dh18.3 billion) spent in the past few months in nations that can offer low costs such as the US, according to the head of Mubadala Investment Co.’s oil and chemicals projects.

“If you think about the low cost environment, the US ranks very high because of the feedstock,” Musabbeh Al Ka’abi, the chief executive officer overseeing Mubadala’s petroleum and petrochemicals, said on Monday in an interview in Abu Dhabi. “The natural gas is relatively attractive and the expansion in the petchem in the US is big.”

The current oil price is good for oil and gas investment, Al Ka’abi said earlier in an interview on Bloomberg TV from Abu Dhabi where hundreds of energy executives are meeting at the Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference (Adipec). Oil demand is “exceeding our expectation,” he said. In recent months, Mubadala has spent $1.7 billion on a chemicals joint venture in the US with Borealis AG and Total SA, and another $2.1 billion on chemicals in Louisiana. It’s also expanding in Vietnam.

 The government-owned investment vehicle is reviewing its portfolio as a step toward the possible sale of some businesses or holdings.


Brent crude, a global benchmark, has climbed the past five consecutive weeks, and is trading close to the highest in two years. The January contract traded at $63.53 a barrel in Dubai on Monday morning.

Mubadala manages about $125 billion in assets after the merger this year of two state investment companies with holdings from aerospace to energy to infrastructure. The government-owned investment vehicle is reviewing its portfolio as a step toward the possible sale of some businesses or holdings, people familiar with the matter said earlier this month.

The company is now producing about 500,000 barrels of crude a day, with major projects in Southeast Asia and North America, Al Ka’abi said. “We believe in the energy landscape in the US,” he said.

Mubadala Petroleum is looking to expand operations in Thailand, UAE Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei said on November 2. The company also owns an enhanced oil recovery project in Oman, according to its website.

Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates, an OPEC state, holds about 6 per cent of the world’s proven oil reserves. Mubadala — the world’s 14th-largest fund, according to the Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute — is part of Abu Dhabi’s effort to turn oil revenue into profitable investments while also attracting technology and jobs. It completed a merger with Abu Dhabi’s International Petroleum Investment Co. earlier this year.

Al Ka’abi is responsible for Mubadala’s petroleum and petrochemicals businesses, including Mubadala Petroleum, owner of the Dolphin Gas pipeline. The pipeline is used to send natural gas from Qatar to the United Arab Emirates, which depends on imported gas to generate half its electricity. Qatar is the world’s largest exporter of liquefied natural gas.