The Gulf has been humming with high-pitched construction activity for a good many years

Low oil prices will trigger a slide in the value of contracts awarded in the GCC to $140 billion this year from $165 billion in the previous year, Meed Projects forecasts.

The tracking service, which looked at 2,100 planned and unawarded projects in the region before making the forecast, said the worst hit would be Saudi Arabia, whose contract value is forecast to drop by almost a fifth (nearly $10 billion) to $40.7 billion in 2016.

The kingdom has seen its revenues fall in line with the oil price, and in its 2016 budget says that forecast revenues will be SR513 billion ($137 billion), almost SR100 billion lower than last year.

At the same time, budgeted spending of SR840 billion will be far below the estimated SR975 billion expenditure of 2015, it added.  

The UAE, buoyed by continuing spending in the Dubai real estate and infrastructure sectors and long-term strategic spending in the Abu Dhabi oil and gas sector, is forecast to see contract awards fall slightly to $36.5 billion from $37.4 billion, said Meed in its report.

Dubai’s commitment to its long-term vision will ensure that spending on projects is maintained despite the worsening financial situation, it added.

The third largest projects market in the GCC will be Kuwait at $24.3 billion, down from a record high $31.5 billion in 2015. It will be followed by Qatar, which will see contract awards fall by $7 billion to $22.2 billion.

Oman and Bahrain are anticipated to maintain last year’s spending levels, recording $13.5 billion and $2.8 billion respectively, although their comparatively small sizes mean that this will have a relatively small impact across the region as a whole.

“With oil prices hitting 11-year lows, there is no real surprise that project spending is forecast to fall in 2016,” remarked Ed James, the director of content and analysis at Meed Projects.

“However, it does mean that it will be a tough 12 months for companies in the sector as the number of project opportunities is reduced,” he added.

James said as a result of falling revenues, governments are expected to prioritise public-private-partnership (PPP) projects and schemes that use other forms of funding, such as export credit agency and contractor financing.

“Firms that can bring their own financing to projects will be in a much stronger position to negotiate with clients because it enables them to keep spending off balance sheet,” he stated.

At the beginning of 2015, Meed Projects forecast total contract awards of more than $172 billion for the year, compared with the actual final total of $165 billion.

“The biggest underperformer last year was Saudi Arabia,” pointed out James.

“The announced hiatus on contract awards in the fourth quarter, plus the postponing of several key projects such as Saudi Arabia’s stadium programme and the Makkah metro scheme, resulted in a shortfall of nearly $10 billion,” he stated.

“In the UAE, the principal cause of the federation’s underperformances was the Abu Dhabi market. While oil and gas spending there has remained robust, investment in the civil construction sector has been relatively anemic compared with previous years,” he added.

 

POSITIVE SIDE

There are some positive drivers, however, Meed Projects said. Spending on power and water projects as well as social infrastructure investment, will be stable in order to maintain economic diversification and job creation efforts.