The UAE's state oil company locked in a long-term crude supply framework with South Korea, giving Asia's fourth-largest crude buyer priority access as ADNOC prepares to ramp output to 5 million barrels a day.
Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. signed a long-term energy security partnership with South Korea on Wednesday, securing emergency crude supply coordination and strategic storage access for Asia's fourth-largest crude buyer as the UAE prepares to boost output to 5 million barrels a day.
"This agreement builds a crude oil security cooperation framework capable of operating stably even in crisis situations such as a Middle East war," Kim Jung-kwan, South Korea's minister of trade, industry and energy, said after signing the pact with ADNOC Chief Executive Sultan Al Jaber in Seoul.
The accord covers stable crude supply, emergency response measures and joint stockpiling, according to a ministry statement. It follows the June 17 memorandum of understanding between the U.S. and Iran on ending hostilities, which has eased shipping risks through the Strait of Hormuz after months of disruption that forced Asian refiners to scramble for alternative barrels.
For ADNOC, the deal locks in a committed buyer as the UAE, following its exit from OPEC, targets a 730,000 barrel-a-day year-on-year supply increase to 5 million bpd in 2027, according to the International Energy Agency. For South Korea, which imported about 8 million barrels of ADNOC's emergency crude sales during the conflict, the framework provides supply-chain insurance against future disruptions.
The partnership deepens ties that have strengthened through a series of high-level exchanges, including President Lee Jae-myung's state visit to the UAE in November and Minister Kim's own visit to Abu Dhabi in June. The two sides also discussed cooperation on applying artificial intelligence in refining and petrochemical operations, areas where both countries hold competitive advantages.
ADNOC's Pricing Pivot
The agreement comes as ADNOC restructures how it prices its crude grades for Asian buyers. The state producer is transitioning the official selling prices for its three offshore grades — Upper Zakum, Das and Umm Lulu — from a differential against Murban futures to a Dubai-linked formula, correcting what analysts described as a structural distortion that made medium-sour barrels artificially expensive during the conflict.
Murban, a light-sweet crude, trades further forward on the ICE Futures Abu Dhabi exchange, making it less suited for prompt cargo sales. Dubai gives buyers a clearer read on near-term demand and cargo values, giving Asian refiners greater leverage to negotiate discounts after they absorbed at least 30 million barrels of ADNOC's emergency crude during the Hormuz disruption.
Output Expansion Underway
ADNOC is executing a $150 billion capital expenditure program for 2026 through 2030, plus an additional Dh200 billion local project pipeline, to boost production capacity and expand export infrastructure including the West-East pipeline that doubles export capacity through the Fujairah hub, bypassing the Strait of Hormuz. The IEA forecasts total UAE oil output, including condensates and natural gas liquids, will top 5.2 million bpd next year.
For South Korea, the pact provides a buffer against the kind of supply shock that sent Asian refiners scrambling for premium-priced U.S. West Texas Intermediate and West African crude during the height of the U.S.-Iran conflict. Indian refiners purchased about 6 million barrels of ADNOC's emergency crude, Japan's Eneos bought 3 million barrels, and South Korea's SK Energy and GS Energy secured another 8 million barrels between them.
The agreement is expected to further deepen bilateral energy and resource security cooperation, with Korean companies exploring participation in UAE energy infrastructure projects including engineering, procurement and construction contracts.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.