Dr Sultan Al Jaber, UAE Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology, and Managing Director and Group CEO of Adnoc, said reliable partnerships are the real strategic reserve, urging leaders to look beyond short-term volatility to the transformative opportunity of rising global energy demand.
Speaking at India Energy Week 2026, Dr Al Jaber said the defining story of
energy today was one of growth, driven by three powerful megatrends: the rise
of emerging markets, the exponential growth of artificial intelligence (AI),
and the transformation of energy systems, all of which converge in India.
“Transformation rewards those who move boldly, not those who wait for calm
seas,” Dr Al Jaber said. He emphasised that global oil demand will remain above
100 million barrels per day through 2040, with demand for both LNG and
electricity to grow by 50% or more.
Electricity demand will be driven not only by AI and data centers but
increasingly by cooling, he added. Global air-conditioner numbers are projected
to more than triple to 5.6 billion by 2050, equivalent to ten AC units sold
every second for the next thirty years.
“Demand at this scale and pace requires investment in all forms of energy,” Dr.
Al Jaber said, adding: “The biggest risk is not over supply, it is
underinvestment.”
As the world’s third largest energy consumer, India has become a decisive
driver of global demand. Over the next 15 years, air travel in India is
expected to grow by 150 per cent, the country’s urban population will approach
one billion people, and data center capacity will surge ten-fold.
“Progress and growth at this scale and pace requires a special kind of
partnership,” said Dr. Al Jaber said. “Partnership that is strategic,
long-term, agile and flexible. Steadfast, dependable, principled and
consistent. Partnership that is based on trust and will endure through thick
and thin. This is precisely what defines the UAE–India relationship.”
As India’s refining demand grows, Adnoc will remain a trusted, dependable crude
supplier. India is Adnoc’s number one LNG market, Adnoc is India’s largest LPG
supplier and continues to supply feedstocks and chemicals.
The UAE is also supporting India’s clean energy ambitions through ALTÉRRA, the
world’s largest private climate investment vehicle, he added, with investments
totaling 11GW across wind, solar and battery storage.
XRG, Adnoc’s international energy investment arm, will leverage the UAE’s
strengths in energy expertise, capital and global partnerships to enhance its
role as a reliable, responsible energy supplier, said Dr. Al Jaber.
Through XRG, Adnoc is expanding its global
gas portfolio, building a world-leading chemicals platform, and investing in
energy infrastructure to support industrial and digital growth at scale.
At the same time, Adnoc is integrating agentic AI to monitor every well in its
portfolio in real-time, deploying more than 200 AI tools and 65 robotics
applications across its operations.
To date, AI has enabled Adnoc to cut
unplanned shutdowns in half, boost performance, drive efficiency and reinforce
resilience.
Dr Al Jaber said: “In an era of constant change, reliable partnerships are the
real strategic reserves.” This conviction has guided the UAE’s leadership to
design an economy that is open to the world. In just three years, the UAE has
signed 35 Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements, including its first
with India, and attracted more than $45 billion in strategic foreign direct
investment in 2025.
“If you are an investor seeking predictable returns, look to the UAE,” Dr Al Jaber said. “If good governance and the
rule of law are essential, you will find them in the UAE. And if you want a
partner whose conviction will not waver, you can count on the UAE.”
Concluding his remarks, Dr Al Jaber said: “In an age of walls, our message is
simple: build doors and the world will walk through them. I invite all our
partners, from India and around the world, to walk with us through those doors
and into the future together.” -TradeArabia News Service