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ENOC lifts efficiency savings beyond AED 478m

Hyphen Web Desk
ENOC Group used Earth Day 2026 to showcase a larger point than a one-day observance, saying energy efficiency has become a core operating discipline across its businesses after cumulative savings passed AED 478 million. The Dubai-based energy group said the gains were built over more than a decade through tighter control of energy use, lower emissions and upgrades across its refinery, terminals, retail network and head office. Earth Day this year is being marked globally under the theme “Our Power, Our Planet.”

The company said its Energy and Resource Management strategy has delivered measurable cuts in energy consumption and greenhouse-gas emissions while also producing direct financial returns, underscoring how decarbonisation and cost discipline can advance together rather than compete for capital. ENOC also said it is moving to embed climate-related performance more deeply into governance and disclosure, aligning its reporting with IFRS S1 and S2 standards as investors, lenders and regulators place greater weight on transparent sustainability metrics.

The latest figure marks a sharp rise from the position outlined in ENOC’s 2024 annual review, which said the group had generated more than AED 390 million in cumulative cost savings from 2014 to 2024. That suggests the company has added roughly AED 88 million in additional savings since the end of that reporting period, giving fresh momentum to an efficiency programme that has been running for years rather than months.

ENOC’s update is significant because it comes at a time when Gulf energy companies are under growing pressure to show that climate pledges are translating into operational results. The group’s own environmental disclosures say more than 300,000 tonnes of carbon-dioxide emissions have been avoided across operations since 2014, while energy intensity fell by about 30 per cent between 2014 and 2020 and greenhouse-gas emissions intensity dropped by about 27 per cent over the same span. Those figures point to a long-running efficiency push that predates the latest wave of climate-reporting rules and sustainability-linked finance.

Much of that performance has come from practical industrial measures rather than headline-grabbing announcements. ENOC has previously pointed to waste-heat recovery at refinery assets, process optimisation, improved fuel use, solar photovoltaic deployment, wastewater management, variable-speed drives for pumps and broad replacement of inefficient lighting with LED systems. On its sustainability pages, the company says solar capacity installed across its operations had reached 3.7 megawatts by 2020, generating annual savings of about AED 2 million, while individual initiatives in refining and processing delivered multi-million-dirham benefits over several years.

That record has also won external recognition. In February 2025, ENOC said it had received the 2024 Energy Management Insight Award from the Clean Energy Ministerial for case studies tied to ISO 50001-certified energy management systems. The company said business units ranging from retail and corporate real estate to lubricants and gas operations had posted measurable savings and emissions cuts, with some units reporting multi-year savings running into hundreds of thousands or more than $1 million.

The message from ENOC’s Earth Day campaign also reflects a broader shift in the UAE’s economic strategy, where efficiency is increasingly treated as a competitiveness tool as much as an environmental obligation. The group explicitly linked its work to Dubai’s Clean Energy Strategy 2050 and the country’s net-zero-by-2050 objective, positioning efficiency improvements as part of the infrastructure needed for a lower-carbon growth model. ENOC’s frontline Earth Day activities, including toolbox talks at operating sites, suggest the company is trying to push sustainability deeper into day-to-day industrial practice instead of confining it to boardroom policy language.

Leadership changes add another layer to the timing. Hussain Sultan Lootah, who was appointed acting chief executive in July 2025 and is now identified in ENOC communications as group chief executive, used the Earth Day statement to frame efficiency as both a climate responsibility and a management priority. That matters because investors and industry observers tend to watch whether strategic transitions preserve continuity in capital allocation and operational targets. On the evidence of ENOC’s latest announcement, the efficiency agenda remains firmly in place.
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Hyphen Web Desk

Hyphen Web Desk