Press releases

Deloitte Middle East Point of View: Resilience in the oil and gas industry

15 April, 2020 – The  increased oil production by Saudi Arabia and Russia combined with the COVID-19 pandemic, have precipitated a global economic slowdown that has left Oil and Gas companies wondering in which direction the industry is heading.

This is one of the topics discussed by Deloitte’s experts in the latest edition of the Deloitte Middle East Point of View: Stay calm and be prepared. In the spring 2020 issue of the magazine, Deloitte experts look at what actions organizations need to take to future-proof themselves from crises.

In their article Building resilience, Bart Cornelissen, Energy, Resources and Industrials Leader and Yasmin Fansa, Manager, Monitor Deloitte, Middle East, say that: “The situation in the Oil and Gas industry has been further affected by the radical stay-at-home measures taken by governments globally to tackle the highly contagious COVID-19 virus, drastically affecting oil demand and the larger global economy.” The authors ask the following question: As the oil industry faces the biggest crisis in decades, how should leaders build resilience in light of an uncertain future? 

“Future-proofing organizations is building resilience and placing it at the core of the organization’s strategy”, they say, “addressing strategic drivers of various market environments to determine implications for industry dynamics and building optionality to gain flexibility to react to the most recent market developments quickly.”

In his article on business transformation, Vuk Prelevic, Assistant Director, Financial Advisory, Deloitte Middle East, argues that “companies are forced to navigate evolving complexities on a daily basis.” He added: “Take a step back and consider a plan for non-core, or underperforming operations that could benefit from a change in directory.” 

Adeel Khan Legari, Manager, Consulting, Deloitte Middle East and his co-author in their article on the importance of the role of the Project Management Office (PMO), Transforming tradition: the Project Management Office, argue the case for the PMO renouncing traditional practices to better respond to technological disruption. 

Dinesh Kumar Kator, Director, and Arijit Bhattacharjee, Manager, Tax, Deloitte Middle East, in their article The hammer of economic substance: Will the shell crack?, argue that with the rapid advent of information technology and globalization, physical barriers and distances are no longer an impediment and businesses had to become agile.

Abi Man Joshi, Tax Director, Deloitte Qatar, Martin Walker, Tax Director & Head of Securities Taxes, Deloitte UK and Jallu Fehar, Associate Tax Director, Deloitte UK, discuss New Mandatory Disclosure Rules (MDR) that will come into effect in the European Union (EU) on 1 July 2020 for cross-border arrangements that concern at least one EU member state, and their far-reaching impact in the Middle East, in their article My house, my rules.

In Keeping pace with financial crime – A dynamic approach to Transaction Monitoring, Nick Athanasi, Partner, Nipun Srivastava, Director and Nicki Koller, Assistant Manager, Financial Advisory, Deloitte Middle East look at machine learning as an emerging focus area in transaction monitoring.

This issue of the ME POV also focuses on IFRS 9 and IFRS 17. Firas Anabtawi, Partner, and Marcelle Hazboun, Senior Manager, Audit & Assurance, Deloitte Middle East, look at the challenges of IFRS 9 modelling in the UAE banking industry. Elias Ma’ayeh, Partner, and Zeeshan Abbasi, Senior Manager, Risk Advisory, Deloitte Middle East, take an in-depth look at IFRS 17.

  • To download the Middle East Point of View Spring 2020 - pdf version, click here
  • To subscribe to the Middle East Point of View, send contact details to middleeast@deloitte.com 

Press contact

Nadine El Hassan
Public Relations Regional Leader
Deloitte Middle East
Tel: +961 (0) 1 748444

Click here for the Arabic version

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About Deloitte & Touche (M.E.):

Deloitte & Touche (M.E.) (DME) is a licensed member firm of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited (DTTL) and is a leading professional services firm established in the Middle East region with uninterrupted presence since 1926. DME’s presence in the Middle East region is established through its affiliated independent legal entities which are licensed to operate and to provide services under the applicable laws and regulations of the relevant country. DME’s affiliates and related entities cannot oblige each other and/or DME, and when providing services, each affiliate and related entity engages directly and independently with its own clients and shall only be liable for its own acts or omissions and not those of any other affiliate.

DME provides audit and assurance, tax, consulting, financial advisory and risk advisory services through 25 offices in 14 countries with more than 3,300 partners, directors and staff. It has alsoreceived numerous awards in the last few years which include, Middle East Best Continuity and Resilience provider (2016), World Tax Awards (2017), Best Advisory and Consultancy Firm (2016), the Middle East Training & Development Excellence Award by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW), as well as the best CSR integrated organization.

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