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The diplomatic ice is breaking in the Gulf. What does that mean for the region?
Photo by Iranian Presidency/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The diplomatic ice is breaking in the Gulf. What does that mean for the region?

    The announcements in mid-August that both the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait will be returning their ambassadors to Tehran after six years provided the latest indication that the diplomatic ice has started to break in the Gulf region.

    August 23, 2022

    Gulf economies should use the available fiscal space to ensure a soft landing
    Photo by Wang Dongzhen/Xinhua via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Gulf economies should use the available fiscal space to ensure a soft landing

    After achieving respectable growth in 2021, the GCC member states now face the risk of monetary (over) tightening due to the need to follow the U.S Federal Reserve’s interest rate adjustments. These increases are not warranted, however, as the GCC economies currently face relatively moderate inflation. Instead, they should use the available fiscal space to mitigate the negative fallout of monetary tightening and make greater use of PPPs for future infrastructure development.

    August 9, 2022

    Pensions, sovereign wealth funds, and industrial policy in the Gulf: A look at fund consolidation
    Photo by HAITHAM AL-SHUKAIRI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Pensions, sovereign wealth funds, and industrial policy in the Gulf: A look at fund consolidation

    The last few years have seen a lot of consolidation in Gulf financial sectors. Not only do these mergers create economic benefits, the merged entities also become potent tools for economic development. The mega-funds and other major financial institutions are part of a trend where Gulf political elites sidestep ossified bureaucracies and instead centralize power in private entities over which they have even more control.

    July 18, 2022

    The Dorra Field: Global gas market impact or bellwether for regional relations?
    Photo by Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Dorra Field: Global gas market impact or bellwether for regional relations?

    The Dorra Gas Field, located in shallow waters offshore in the northern Arabian Gulf, lies at the junction of competing territorial claims by Kuwait, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. With the growing gas demand in these countries, any production will be absorbed into the domestic network and the impact of production on the global gas and LNG market will be insignificant. However, the development of the field, if it occurs, may serve as a bellwether for regional relations.

    May 13, 2022

    Iran’s renewed focus on shared gas fields
  • Analysis
  • Iran’s renewed focus on shared gas fields

    Making the most of Iran’s reserves will require it to develop shared fields like Dorra/Arash, a gas field located offshore in the northern Gulf, where Iran must vie with competing claims from neighboring Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. In the past, Iran has often neglected its joint gas fields as a result of sanctions and focused instead on meeting its rapidly growing domestic needs through exploiting non-shared fields, but the country says this must change going forward.

    May 12, 2022

    The CMF-153: Rebuilding US-GCC confidence through maritime security
  • Analysis
  • The CMF-153: Rebuilding US-GCC confidence through maritime security

    Efforts to restore confidence between the U.S. and the Arab Gulf states took a first step with the recent formation of a new naval task force, known as the Combined Maritime Forces-153 (CMF-153), to improve maritime security in the Red Sea, Bab el-Mandeb, and the Gulf of Aden, including the hotspot of Yemen. Established in mid-April, the new task force intends to target weapons smuggling for Ansar Allah, as the Houthi militias are officially known, as well as human trafficking and the drug trade.

    May 11, 2022

    US-Gulf Relations at the Crossroads: Time for a Recalibration
    Photo by JONATHAN ERNST/POOL/AFP via Getty Images.
  • Analysis
  • US-Gulf Relations at the Crossroads: Time for a Recalibration

    The global response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has focused new attention on friction between the United States and its traditional partners in the Gulf and reinforced skepticism regarding the United States’ status as the dominant international partner in the region. It’s time for both sides to identify a realistic way forward that sheds outdated notions of mutual obligation without becoming merely transactional.

    April 5, 2022

    Renewable power policies in the Arab Gulf states
    Photo by MARWAN NAAMANI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Renewable power policies in the Arab Gulf states

    The Arab Gulf states appear to be following a common template in responding to the global transition toward an energy system in which renewables play an increasingly central role. They are publicizing renewable energy targets, decarbonizing upstream and downstream oil and gas operations, commissioning renewable energy projects, and improving energy efficiency, among other strategies. A closer look, however, reveals differences in how they have deployed solar and wind power capacity.

    How Oman’s history inspires its novelists
    Young Omani author Ammar Alnaaimi. Image by Muhanna Al Siyabi.
  • Analysis
  • How Oman’s history inspires its novelists

    Why have authors revisited it over the decades through literary works, and what makes it appealing to international readers?

    January 31, 2022

    Dust in the Cloud: The Future of Data Governance in the GCC
    Photo by Christopher Pike/Bloomberg/via Getty Images.
  • Analysis
  • Dust in the Cloud: The Future of Data Governance in the GCC

    As the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) work to transform from hydrocarbons-driven to data-driven economies, they will need to make significant and well-planned invest-ments in digital infrastructure, particularly when it comes to the complex issue of data govern-ance. They must take the lead in establishing regulatory and legal frameworks aligned with international standards in terms of data gathering, processing, and storing procedures. This report highlights the existing laws and regulations that govern data protection in the GCC while addressing their potential and limitations, along with the similarities and differences between the GCC’s legislative frameworks and the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation, and the impact of the GCC’s current data protection laws on individuals, the private sector, regulators, and governments.

    December 6, 2021

    Energy Prospects in the Gulf: The Oil Price Ascent, in Brief
    Photo by Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Energy Prospects in the Gulf: The Oil Price Ascent, in Brief

    While oil prices have rebounded before soaring since the depths of collapse in the spring of 2020 — with Brent crude prices skyrocketing from $19 per barrel in April 2020 to a three-year high of $86 per barrel in October 2021 — the prospects for a sustained high oil price for Gulf producers is unlikely.

    Travels beyond Gurnah: Migration in the work of Ali Al-Sharji and Shaima Al-Tamimi
    From Home to Home by Ali Al Sharji
  • Analysis
  • Travels beyond Gurnah: Migration in the work of Ali Al-Sharji and Shaima Al-Tamimi

    When Abdulrazak Gurnah was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in October, he and his novels came under the international spotlight. The award committee praised his “uncompromising and compassionate penetration of the effects of colonialism and the fates of the refugee in the gulf between cultures and continents.” But Gurnah is not the only son of Zanzibar whose art has been shaped by the memories of migration, and his recent recognition is an occasion to highlight and reflect on creative work in different media by individuals of similar backgrounds who have also been shaped by the trauma of forced departure.

    November 15, 2021