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Kate Dourian

Non-Resident Fellow, AGSI; Contributing Editor, MEES; Fellow, Energy Institute

Kate Dourian is a non-resident fellow at the Arab Gulf States Institute, a contributing editor at MEES, and a fellow at the Energy Institute. Previously she was the regional manager for the Middle East and Gulf states at the World Energy Council, as well as the programme officer for the Middle East and North Africa in the Global Energy Relations Division of the International Energy Agency since September 2015. Her role included building relationships between the IEA and the governments of several Middle East and North Africa countries, using the extensive contacts that she accumulated during three decades spent in several Middle Eastern and North African countries as a journalist and energy analyst. Dourian was actively involved in the discussions that led to Morocco becoming an IEA Association country and the joint work program for which she raised funds from IEA members. She also helped write and edit the Middle East and North Africa sections of several IEA publications and contributed to the supply section of the Oil Market Report. She made presentations on behalf of the IEA in various capitals, most recently at the IEF Ministerial in New Delhi in April 2018. Dourian is often consulted on Middle Eastern matters by banks, financial institutions, and oil and gas companies. She also served as the IEA’s representative on the executive board of the International Energy Forum.

Dourian joined the IEA from the Middle East Economic Survey where she was a senior editor covering energy-related developments in the Middle East for the weekly from 2013-15. She was also responsible for compiling the monthly OPEC survey for MEES, which is one of the secondary sources used by OPEC.

From 2000-13, Dourian was the editor in chief for the Middle East for oil price reporting agency Platts, now a division of S&P Global, based in Dubai. She was also the general manager of McGraw-Hill International. Additionally, she served as a member of the OPEC reporting team and was one of the reporters assigned to compile the OPEC production numbers. While in Dubai, Dourian served as a board member of the American Business Council.

From 1983-2000, Dourian was a correspondent and then a senior editor at Reuters, serving in a number of postings including Beirut, Nicosia, London, and Rabat. She joined the energy desk in 1992, covering the Brent crude market and OPEC meetings. Prior to joining Reuters, Dourian worked as a foreign correspondent for the Associated Press, based in Beirut, Lebanon from 1981-83.

Dourian has been a speaker and moderator at international conferences and has made many radio and television appearances, discussing energy and geopolitics on a number of platforms in English, Arabic, and French on BBC, CNN, Al Arabiya, CNBC, and Al Jazeera English, and has been quoted extensively in several publications. In 2024, Dourian was recognized by Gulf Intelligence as one of the top 30 female energy analysts.

Analysis

CLEAR ALL

Low-Cost Barrels Lure Oil Majors Back to the Middle East

From the Gulf to the eastern Mediterranean and North Africa, governments are recalibrating fiscal terms, monetization strategies, and partnership models to attract international players.

Kate Dourian

13 min read

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed al-Sudani attends a signing ceremony for a preliminary agreement between Iraq's Oil Ministry and Exxon Mobil to develop the Majnoon oil field, in Baghdad, Iraq, October 8, 2025. (Iraqi Prime Minister’s Media Office/Handout via REUTERS)

Venezuela, Trump, and Implications for OPEC’s Middle Eastern Core

A founding member of OPEC is now effectively under external control, raising questions about sovereignty, influence, and the resilience of producer-led market management.

Kate Dourian

11 min read

Vehicles drive past the El Palito oil refinery in Puerto Cabello, Venezuela, Dec. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix, File)

IEA Outlook Revives Oil Demand Growth Debate Amid Rising Energy Security Risks

The International Energy Agency sees demand increasing as rising living standards in developing countries and geopolitical anxieties push policymakers to favor energy affordability and reliability over aggressive decarbonization.

Kate Dourian

10 min read

Executive Director of the International Energy Agency Fatih Birol delivers opening remarks at the Future of Energy Security Summit, in London, Britain, April 24. (JUSTIN TALLIS/Pool via REUTERS)

LNG Heavyweights Qatar and U.S. Take Aim at EU Directive

Without mutual recognition mechanisms, Gulf exporters may face higher compliance costs and potential exclusion from European markets despite genuine emission-reduction efforts.

Kate Dourian

7 min read

The MENA Power Transformation: Meeting Unprecedented Demand

The Middle East and North Africa will experience an unprecedented level of energy demand between now and 2035, pushing Gulf countries to find new ways to meet that demand.

Kate Dourian

7 min read

An electric pylon supporting power cables is seen near the western region of Liwa, United Arab Emirates, March 31, 2010. (REUTERS/Jumana ElHeloueh)

Saudi Surge in Gas and Renewable Energy

Saudi Arabia is investing heavily in natural gas and renewables, as it targets an end to the use of oil in power generation by the end of the decade.

Kate Dourian

8 min read

A general view of the natural gas liquids facility in Saudi Aramco's Shaybah oilfield at the Empty Quarter in Saudi Arabia, May 22, 2018. (REUTERS/Ahmed Jadallah)

Events

CLEAR ALL

Feb 17, 2026

Global Energy Dynamics 2026: Oil, Politics, and Power Plays From Washington to the Gulf

On February 17, AGSI hosted a discussion on the geopolitics of the global energy market.

Flames rise from flare stacks at the Amuay refinery in Los Taques, Venezuela, January 14. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)
Flames rise from flare stacks at the Amuay refinery in Los Taques, Venezuela, January 14. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)

Oct 17, 2024

Oil Prices Between Regional Conflict and the U.S. Presidential Election

On October 17, AGSIW hosted a discussion on the implications of regional conflict and the U.S. presidential election on oil prices.

Apr 4, 2024

COPs, Oil Exporters, and Their Role in the Energy Transition

On April 4, AGSIW hosted a discussion on COP and the energy transition.

A man in traditional Emirati clothes attends the first day of the United Nations Climate Conference, COP28, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, November 30, 2023. (REUTERS/Amr Alfiky)
A man in traditional Emirati clothes attends the first day of the United Nations Climate Conference, COP28, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, November 30, 2023. (REUTERS/Amr Alfiky)

Jan 25, 2024

The Future of Hydrogen Development in the Gulf

On January 25, AGSIW hosted a discussion on hydrogen in the Gulf.

Hydrogen powered mobile unite is seen during Saudi Aramco's media trip to demonstrate Hydrogen automotive technology at Techno Valley Science Park in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, June 27, 2021. (REUTERS/Hajer Abdulmohsin)
Hydrogen powered mobile unite is seen during Saudi Aramco's media trip to demonstrate Hydrogen automotive technology at Techno Valley Science Park in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, June 27, 2021. (REUTERS/Hajer Abdulmohsin)

Sep 15, 2022

China-Gulf Initiative: Evolving Chinese Demand for Gulf Energy and Geopolitical Implications

On September 15, as part of the China-Gulf Initiative, AGSIW hosted a discussion examining energy relations between China and the Gulf states.

A liquefied natural gas storage tank and workers are reflected in a puddle at PetroChina's receiving terminal at Rudong port in Nantong, Jiangsu province, China September 4, 2018. (REUTERS/Stringer)
A liquefied natural gas storage tank and workers are reflected in a puddle at PetroChina's receiving terminal at Rudong port in Nantong, Jiangsu province, China September 4, 2018. (REUTERS/Stringer)

Mar 10, 2022

Following Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine, Can Gulf Countries Stabilize Energy Markets? 

On March 10, AGSIW hosted a discussion examining the impact of the Ukraine crisis on global oil and gas markets and the direct effects on the Gulf region.

An employee stands in front of a fuel pump at a gas station, Istanbul, Turkey, March 2. (Gocheryimagery/MediaPunch /IPX)
An employee stands in front of a fuel pump at a gas station, Istanbul, Turkey, March 2. (Gocheryimagery/MediaPunch /IPX)

Engagement

CLEAR ALL

The Gulf Nashra Weekly Digest listed Kate Dourian’s publication “Venezuela, Trump, and Implications for OPEC’s Middle Eastern Core” as a top pick.

The Gulf Nashra

Anadolu Agency: Kate Dourian commented on the lifting of sanctions on Syria by the United States and the impact on Syria’s reconstruction efforts.

Anadolu Agency: Kate Dourian commented on the lifting of sanctions on Syria by the United States and the impact on Syria’s reconstruction efforts.

Anadolu Agency

AGBI: Kate Dourian commented on Aramco’s capital expenditures.

AGBI: Kate Dourian commented on Aramco’s capital expenditures.

AGBI

Anadolu Agency: Kate Dourian commented on U.S.-Saudi relations.

Anadolu Agency: Kate Dourian commented on U.S.-Saudi relations.

Anadolu Agency