Taqa’s $1.2bn purchase of Spanish water company to ‘significantly accelerate’ global expansion

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Taqa’s .2bn purchase of Spanish water company to ‘significantly accelerate’ global expansion

Abu Dhabi National Energy Company, better known as Taqa, has agreed to buy Spanish water treatment and water desalination company GS Inima for $1.2 billion to expand its water business.

The transaction is expected to close in 2026 and will “significantly accelerate” the group’s international water growth strategy, the company said on Sunday. The deal is subject to regulatory approvals and other closing conditions.

Under the deal, GS Engineering & Construction will divest its entire stake in GS Inima, which it owned through its subsidiary Global Water Solutions, to Taqa.

GS Inima, based in Madrid, operates water desalination, wastewater treatment and related infrastructure projects in Brazil, the Middle East, Europe, the US, Mexico and Oman. The deal will provide Taqa with immediate access to these markets, it said.

“The acquisition of GS Inima is aligned with our strategy to focus on growing our water business,” Jasim Thabet, Taqa’s group chief executive and managing director, told The National on Monday. “Once the transaction closes, we would have access to 10 countries with water projects, with over 50 active projects across Latin America, the US, Europe and the Middle East.”

GS Inima is a “platform for growth” as it has a full range of expertise in water projects. It handles development, building, operations and asset management throughout projects, he added.

Established in 2005, Abu Dhabi-listed Taqa is a diversified utilities and energy group with investments in power and water generation, transmission and distribution assets, as well as upstream and midstream oil and gas operations.

It has assets in the UAE as well as Canada, Ghana, India, Morocco, Oman, the Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, the UK and the US. Taqa is also a shareholder in Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company (Masdar), along with Mubadala and Adnoc.

The company has committed to expanding its share of renewables to at least 30 per cent of total generation capacity by 2030.