Abu Dhabi National Energy Co. is considering options for its oil and gas assets, including a potential sale, as the state-owned utility focuses more on power generation. Speaking with potential advisers as it reviews a business that spans countries including the UK and Canada. Taqa’s oil and gas portfolio could be worth substantially less than the billions of dollars it spent to build it. No final decisions have been made and it may decide not to proceed with a sale. Taqa has a monopoly on power and water distribution in Abu Dhabi, capital of the oil-rich United Arab Emirates. The city’s government aims to create a regional utility champion out of the company. Last year, Abu Dhabi orchestrated a plan for Taqa to receive assets from government-owned holding company Abu Dhabi Power Corp., known as ADPower.
Deal pushed Taqa’s valuation to more than $40bn and made it one of the largest listed companies in the UAE. The firm’s oil and gas business has struggled because of last year’s coronavirus-triggered slump in commodity prices. In 2020, it made revenue of Dhs4.2bn ($1.1bn), a 31 per cent drop from the previous year. Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization fell 71 per cent to Dhs700m. Taqa built its oil and gas unit mostly through acquisitions. It bought Calgary-based Northrock Resources for $2bn in 2007 and acquired BP’s North Sea assets for $1.1bn in 2012. In the UK, the company also operates the Brent System pipeline, which carries about 5 per cent of the country’s oil.