Bahrains Huge Find Could Hold Up To 600m Recoverable Barrels
A pump operates in an oilfield in Awali, Bahrain. The country has announced a massive oil and gas find.
Abu Dhabi: Bahrain’s latest oil find could hold reserves of between 300 million to 600 million recoverable barrels, but analysts say it could take several years and significant investment to achieve a tangible output.
The country discovered its biggest oilfield since it started producing crude in 1932, according to an announcement by the official news agency on Sunday.
“The key challenges for Bahrain are to access the right level of investment, as well as the right technical capabilities,” said Jaafar Al Taie, managing director of Manaar Energy Group.
He however said Bahrain has reasonable national capabilities in the form of Bapco (The Bahrain Petroleum Company) and existing relationships with Saudi Aramco could prove an additional asset.
“Having existing relationships with Aramco could prove an additional asset as Aramco is becoming a global leader in developing offshore assets and producing hydrocarbons from increasingly mature and difficult areas. In addition, Bahrain has a strong financial sector and good access to international companies.”
Currently, Bahrain is working with Saudi Aramco on the Abu Safah offshore oilfield and has a revenue sharing agreement with the Saudi-based oil giant.
When asked on the estimated reserves of latest oil discovery, he said it was difficult to estimate due to tight oil and deep gas formations but could be in the range of 300 million to 600 million recoverable barrels.
Having existing relationships with Aramco could prove an additional asset as Aramco is becoming a global leader in developing offshore assets.”
- Jaafar Al Taie | MD of Manaar Energy Group
Bahrain is not part of Opec and is not bound by the group’s policy of limiting production, but is expected to continue a strong degree of cooperation, he added.
The current oil production of Bahrain is about 53,000 barrels per day.
Bahrain discovered the offshore Khaleej Al Bahrain Basin as it seeks to expand output capacity at its wholly owned Bahrain Field to 100,000 barrels a day by the end of the decade.
The country is pumping about 45,000 barrels of oil a day from its Bahrain Field, and it shares income from a deposit with Saudi Arabia that produces about 300,000 barrels a day, according to figures from the US Energy Information Administration.
Bahrain has crude reserves of 124.6 million barrels — fewer than Poland — and 92.03 billion cubic metres of natural gas, according to the CIA Factbook.
Saudi Arabia, by comparison, has 266.5 billion barrels of crude reserves, while Qatar has 24.3 trillion cubic metres of gas.
— With inputs from Bloomberg
Digital Payments Dominate Saudi Arabia As Cash Use Continues To Decline, Visa Says
Visa research shows 80% of transactions in Saudi Arabia are now digital, highlighting accelerating consumer shift away ... Read more
Saudi Venture Capital Surges 145 Per Cent To $1.72bn In Record 2025
Saudi Arabia leads MENA venture capital for a third year, with 2025 investment reaching $1.72bn across a record 257 dea... Read more
GCC Debt Market Tops $1.1trn As Dollar Issuance Surges – Report
Fitch Ratings says GCC debt capital markets grew 14% in 2025, led by US dollar borrowing and record sukuk activity The ... Read more
Humain Secures $1.2bn To Fuel Saudi AI Push
Saudi Arabia's state-backed AI firm secures financing to build 250 megawatts of data centre capacity, as the kingdom ra... Read more
Global FDI Jumps 14% In 2025 To $1.6 Trillion, UNCTAD Says
Data centre projects topped $270 billion in 2025, making up more than one fifth of global greenfield investment, as sem... Read more
UAE Tax Compliance In 2026: All You Need To Know
Experts warn that deeper audits, stricter documentation requirements and the rollout of e-invoicing will reshape tax op... Read more