Business Today Middle East

The Middle East’s Hydrogen Moment Has Arrived

The Middle East is capitalising on its abundant sunshine and vast land to emerge as a global powerhouse in hydrogen production
The Middle East positioning itself as a dominant exporter of hydrogen
The Middle East is positioning itself as a dominant exporter of hydrogen

By late 2025, the global conversation around energy has moved past “Peak Oil” and into the era of “Hydrogen Hegemony.” With the European Union and East Asian economies (Japan and South Korea) desperate for carbon-free fuel, the Middle East is leveraging its two greatest natural resources—abundant sunshine and vast land—to become the world’s primary hydrogen exporter.

As we look toward 2026, these are the milestones and dynamics defining the race.

1. Saudi Arabia: NEOM’s 4GW Milestone

The NEOM Green Hydrogen Company (NGHC) is entering its most critical phase. As of December 2025, the project is over 80% complete.

2. Oman: The Dark Horse of Duqm

While Saudi Arabia and the UAE often capture the headlines, Oman is set to commission one of the region’s first commercial-scale plants in 2026.

3. UAE: Integrating “Green Steel” and “Green Hubs”

The UAE’s 2026 strategy is distinct; it isn’t just about exporting the gas, but using it to decarbonize its own massive industrial base.

4. The “Corridor to Europe” Dynamics

2026 marks the beginning of the Mediterranean Hydrogen Pipeline feasibility breakthroughs.

CountryProject / Milestone2026 Focus
Saudi ArabiaNEOM NGHCCompletion of 4GW Solar/Wind Power Array.
OmanACME DuqmCommissioning of Phase 1 (100,000 tpa).
UAEMasdar / EMSTEELFull-scale integration of H2 in steel manufacturing.
QatarBlue Ammonia PlantStart of commercial operations for the world’s largest blue ammonia facility.

⚠️ Challenges for the 2026 Horizon

Despite the momentum, two hurdles remain central to the 2026 board meetings:

  1. Water Scarcity: Electrolysers require ultra-pure water. 2026 will see the first large-scale “Solar Desalination” plants specifically built to feed hydrogen projects.
  2. Standardization: As of December 2025, the world still lacks a unified “Green Hydrogen Certificate.” Middle Eastern nations are lobbying heavily in 2026 to define global carbon-intensity standards.
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