UAE’s TAQA, ADPower Form 3rd Largest Publicly Traded Company

UAE’s TAQA, ADPower Form 3rd Largest Publicly Traded Company
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UAE’s TAQA, ADPower Form 3rd Largest Publicly Traded Company

UAE’s TAQA, ADPower Form 3rd Largest Publicly Traded Company

Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (TAQA) announced the successful completion of its transaction with Abu Dhabi Power Corporation (ADPower) creating one of the largest utility companies in the region of Europe, Middle East, and Africa (EMEA).

The transaction saw the transfer of ADPower’s majority power and water generation, transmission and distribution assets to TAQA in exchange for over 106 billion new shares.

With the completion of the transaction, TAQA is now the UAE’s third-largest publicly traded company by market capitalization and among the top-ten integrated utility companies in EMEA by regulated assets.

TAQA currently has 23 GW of power generation capacity globally and 916 MIGD of water desalination capacity, of which 1.4 GW are from renewable sources. It also has a further 4.4 GW and 200 MIGD under development, including 2 GW from renewable sources.

TAQA’s assets now include 12 power and water generation plants in operation, and it is the only company responsible for all of Abu Dhabi’s power and water transmission and distribution.

It has its own international assets in Canada, Ghana, India, Iraq, Morocco, the Netherlands, Oman, Saudi Arabia, UK, and the US.

ADPower will own 98.60 percent of the entire issued share capital of TAQA, which intends to increase to the free float through a follow on public offering.

TAQA Chairman Mohammed al-Suwaidi indicated that the successful consolidation of Abu Dhabi’s power and water assets has created a true national energy champion that is well-positioned to spearhead the transformation of the utilities industry.

“TAQA’s strong balance sheet, predictable income, access to global capital markets and deep industry expertise enables it to play an active role in the UAE’s diversification strategy, putting a strong emphasis on clean sources," Suwaidi was quoted as saying by Emirates News Agency (WAM).

He added that the company will invest and deploy new technology to ensure continued reliable and efficient supply of power and water and additional sustainable capacity to meet the demands of the UAE economy.

For his part, TAQA’s CEO Jasim Husain Thabet said that this transaction is the beginning of TAQA’s new journey, which will fully integrate “our diverse asset portfolio and combine the talent and expertise of both organizations into a stronger company,” which will contribute to the socio-economic development of UAE.

“We benefit from a strong capital structure, a robust business model and exclusivity rights to participate in all generation and water desalination projects tendered in Abu Dhabi over the next decade with a minimum 40% equity share,” he concluded.



Indonesia Expects to Conclude Free Trade Talks with EU by End of June

People attend a morning prayer on the street during Eid al-Adha celebrations in Jakarta, Indonesia, 06 June 2025. (EPA)
People attend a morning prayer on the street during Eid al-Adha celebrations in Jakarta, Indonesia, 06 June 2025. (EPA)
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Indonesia Expects to Conclude Free Trade Talks with EU by End of June

People attend a morning prayer on the street during Eid al-Adha celebrations in Jakarta, Indonesia, 06 June 2025. (EPA)
People attend a morning prayer on the street during Eid al-Adha celebrations in Jakarta, Indonesia, 06 June 2025. (EPA)

Indonesia said on Saturday that free trade negotiations with the European Union, which have been going on for nine years, are expected to finish by the end of June.

Airlangga Hartarto, the chief economic minister for Southeast Asia's biggest economy, met with EU Commissioner for Trade Maros Sefcovic in Brussels on Friday.

"Indonesia and the European Union have agreed to conclude outstanding issues and we are ready to announce a conclusion of substantial negotiations by the end of June 2025," Airlangga Hartarto said in a statement.

He did not disclose details about what agreements may have been reached.

Denis Chaibi, EU Ambassador to Indonesia, said: "Negotiations are ongoing and substance will determine timing. We will communicate in details when we have an outcome."

The EU is Indonesia's fifth biggest trade partner, with total trade between the two reaching $30.1 billion last year. Indonesia had a $4.5 billion trade surplus, Airlangga said.

Indonesia and the EU have previously disagreed on EU trade rules for products with potential links to deforestation that could affect Indonesian palm oil, as well as Jakarta's ban on exports of raw minerals.

Indonesian officials have been motivated to accelerate talks on free trade agreements, keen to diversify the country's export destinations as they deal with US tariff challenges.

Seeking to end US trade deficits worldwide, US President Donald Trump announced sweeping "reciprocal" tariffs that have since been paused until July.

Indonesia is facing a 32% tariff rate.