The Law Behind Qatar’s Gas Boom (1995–2013)
Dr. Talal Abdulla Al-Emadi
16 Jul 2026
The late Father Amir H H Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani sadly left this world a few days ago, plunging our nation into a period of mourning. The tributes have understandably focused on achievements notable to all: a GDP that expanded more than twentyfold, a country transformed into the world’s leading LNG exporter, and a sovereign wealth fund that ranks among the largest globally. Far less attention has been paid to something quieter, yet equally enduring: the legal and institutional foundations that made those achievements possible.
Qatar’s gas wealth was not discovered after 1995. The North Field had been identified decades earlier. What changed during H H Sheikh Hamad’s era was not the size of the resource, but the state’s determination to build the institutions, governance structures, and legal framework necessary to develop it responsibly, and to ensure that its benefits would endure for generations.
This transformation was gradual rather than sudden. In the early years, reform focused primarily on institutional restructuring. In 2001, amendments to the 1974 decree-law establishing the national oil company reorganized and rebranded it as Qatar Petroleum, placing it under a newly established Supreme Council for Economic Affairs and Investment chaired by Sheikh Hamad himself. The following year saw the enactment of Decree-Law No. 30 of 2002, Qatar’s first comprehensive environmental legislation, regulating matters ranging from oil-tanker pollution to pipeline discharges and industrial emissions.
A defining moment came in 2005. Faced with concerns that the North Field was being developed too rapidly, Qatar Petroleum, today’s QatarEnergy, took a decision that remains exceptional in the history of national oil companies. It voluntarily suspended further development of its most valuable asset to safeguard the reservoir’s long-term productivity rather than maximise immediate revenues. That moratorium lasted for more than a decade and is widely regarded as one of the most consequential strategic decisions in Qatar’s energy history.
The same year witnessed the establishment of the Qatar Investment Authority, ensuring that hydrocarbon revenues would be transformed into long-term national wealth rather than consumed as short-term expenditure. Two years later, Qatar enacted Law No. 3 of 2007, the Natural Resources Law, the country’s first comprehensive legislative framework governing the sector. By consolidating more than three decades of fragmented decrees into a single coherent statute, it created the legal foundation that continues to underpin Qatar’s natural resources regime today.
Looking back, perhaps the most remarkable feature of this period is the sequence in which reform occurred. H H Sheikh Hamad’s government did not legislate first and build institutions later. Instead, it established institutions, accumulated practical experience, including the discipline demonstrated by the North Field moratorium, and only then codified that experience into comprehensive legislation once the institutional model had matured. The publication of Qatar National Vision 2030 the following year further reflected a leadership already planning for a future extending beyond hydrocarbons.
















