What Are IKTVA and ICV? The Gulf Local-Content Rules That Decide Who Wins Energy Tenders
IKTVA and ICV are the local-content programmes that Saudi Aramco and the UAE use to score suppliers on how much value they keep inside the country, and to weight that score directly in tender evaluation. This dossier explains what each programme is, how the scores are built, what good looks like, and what a supplier has to do to compete for Gulf energy spend in 2026.
- IKTVA (Saudi Aramco) and ICV (UAE) are local-content scoring programmes: they measure how much of a supplier’s value is retained in-country and weight that score in procurement decisions.
- Both scores are a ratio. Local spend on goods and services, local manufacturing, capital investment and the salaries and training of nationals are added up and divided by the supplier’s total revenue, producing a percentage that is independently certified.
- The headline targets are public. Aramco’s IKTVA score reached 70 percent local content in early 2026, up from 35 percent in 2015, and is now aimed at 75 percent by 2030; the UAE’s national ICV programme reports tens of billions of dirhams redirected into the local economy.
- The score is not a badge, it is a commercial weapon. In ADNOC and Aramco tenders a higher local-content score earns a weighted advantage at the commercial-evaluation stage, and is often the difference between two otherwise comparable bids.
- For an international supplier, the programmes reward a multi-year localisation plan, local manufacturing or assembly, local procurement, joint ventures and the employment and training of Saudis or Emiratis, not a one-off gesture.
What the two programmes actually are
IKTVA and ICV are local-content programmes. Their purpose is to make sure that when a national oil company or a government body spends money, as much of that money as possible stays inside the national economy, building local industry, local jobs and local capability rather than flowing straight back out to foreign suppliers. They do that by measuring each supplier’s local contribution as a score, and then using that score in how contracts are awarded.
IKTVA stands for In-Kingdom Total Value Add. It is Saudi Aramco’s programme, launched in 2015 as a cornerstone of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 diversification agenda. It applies across Aramco’s supply chain, an annual procurement budget that exceeds 30 billion dollars across materials, equipment, services and logistics.
ICV stands for In-Country Value. It is the United Arab Emirates programme. ADNOC, the Abu Dhabi national oil company, launched its ICV programme in 2018, and the model has since been adopted nationally: the UAE’s National In-Country Value Programme is run by the Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology, MoIAT, and a single ICV certificate is now recognised across ADNOC and a widening group of federal and emirate-level bodies. So while “ICV” is often used as shorthand for the ADNOC programme, in 2026 it is really a national framework.
The two are close cousins by design, both born of Gulf diversification strategy, both built to redirect oil-and-gas procurement into the domestic economy, and both expressing the result as a single certified percentage. The differences are in the detail of how the percentage is built and how it is used, which is where suppliers win or lose.
IKTVA
Saudi Aramco’s In-Kingdom Total Value Add programme, launched 2015. Scores suppliers on local content across Aramco’s 30-billion-dollar-plus supply chain.
ICV
The UAE’s In-Country Value programme, launched by ADNOC in 2018 and now run nationally by the Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology (MoIAT).
Shared purpose
Both redirect national-oil-company and government spend into the local economy, and weight a certified local-content score directly in tender evaluation.
Project 54Local-content rules decide which suppliers capture Gulf energy spend: IKTVA and ICV reward those who manufacture, invest and hire inside Saudi Arabia and the UAE.How an IKTVA or ICV score is built
Both programmes express local content as a ratio, and the inputs are broadly the same. The numerator adds up the value a supplier creates inside the country: money spent buying goods and services from local suppliers, the cost of manufacturing or work performed locally, investment in local plant and equipment, and the salaries and training of national employees. That total is divided by the supplier’s revenue from the relevant business, and the result is a percentage. A company that does most of its work, buying, building and hiring inside the country scores highly; one that imports finished goods and books the margin abroad scores low.
The scores are not self-declared. They are calculated from audited financial data and certified by approved third parties. Under the UAE national programme a supplier’s ICV certificate is issued by a MoIAT-authorised certifying body that reviews the submitted figures and applies the official national formula; Aramco runs an equivalent certification process for IKTVA. The certificate is time-bound, normally tied to the company’s audited financial year, so a supplier has to re-certify to keep a current score.
The treatment of people is where the design shows its teeth. The UAE formula weights the salaries and training of Emirati nationals more heavily than those of expatriate staff, and the bonus structure rewards year-on-year growth in Emirati headcount, so a business that runs entirely on an expatriate workforce hits a structural ceiling on its score. Aramco’s programme similarly rewards the employment and development of Saudis. Local content, in other words, is not only about where goods are made; it is also about who is employed and trained to make them.
Local spend
Purchases of goods and services from in-country suppliers, plus the cost of manufacturing or work performed locally.
Investment
Capital invested in local plant, equipment and facilities, the asset base that proves a long-term commitment rather than a sales office.
Nationals
Salaries and training of Saudi or Emirati employees, weighted more heavily than expatriate cost, with bonuses for growing national headcount.
IKTVA and ICV compared
The programmes rhyme, but they are not identical, and a supplier selling into both Saudi Arabia and the UAE has to manage two separate certifications, two formulas and two sets of priorities. The table below sets out the practical differences that matter when you are deciding where to manufacture, who to hire and how to structure a bid.
The single most important point for an international supplier is that neither score travels. An IKTVA score earned with Aramco does not help a bid in Abu Dhabi, and an ADNOC ICV certificate does not count in Dhahran. Each market has to be earned on its own terms, which is why Gulf market entry is a multi-year commitment rather than a single tender.
| Dimension | IKTVA (Saudi Arabia) | ICV (UAE) |
|---|---|---|
| Full name | In-Kingdom Total Value Add | In-Country Value |
| Owner | Saudi Aramco | ADNOC; now national under MoIAT |
| Launched | 2015 | 2018 (ADNOC); national framework since |
| What it scores | Local content as a share of Aramco supply-chain spend | Local content as a share of total company revenue |
| Core inputs | Local goods and services, manufacturing, investment, Saudi jobs | UAE goods and services, manufacturing, investment, Emiratisation |
| Certification | Aramco-administered IKTVA certification | MoIAT-authorised certifying body, audited data |
| How it is used | Weighted in Aramco supplier evaluation and development | Weighted in ADNOC and federal tenders; threshold and tie-breaker |
| Headline progress | 70% local content reached early 2026; 75% target by 2030 | Tens of billions of dirhams in local procurement and investment |
Why the score decides who wins the work
A local-content certificate is not a compliance formality that you file and forget; it is a number that sits inside the bid evaluation and changes the outcome. In ADNOC and Aramco tenders the local-content score is applied as a weighting at the commercial-evaluation stage, so a bidder with a higher score can win against a cheaper rival, and a supplier with a strong score and a credible localisation trajectory is rewarded over one that simply imports. Across the wider Gulf, participating entities use the score in three ways: as a percentage weighting on the total bid, as a tie-breaker between otherwise comparable bids, and as an eligibility threshold a bidder must clear to be considered at all.
That makes the score a commercial asset to be managed, not a box to be ticked. The suppliers that win treat their IKTVA or ICV plan the way they treat price and delivery: they map where their score is leaking, local versus imported content, expatriate versus national payroll, and they invest to close the gap before the tender, not after. Aramco’s flagship IKTVA Forum, the 2025 edition signed 145 agreements and memoranda worth about 9 billion dollars on its opening day, exists precisely to broker that localisation, matching international suppliers with Saudi partners and manufacturing opportunities.
For an international supplier the implication is strategic. Winning sustained Gulf energy spend means building a local footprint: manufacturing or assembling in-country, buying from local suppliers, forming joint ventures with national partners, and hiring and training Saudis or Emiratis. Each of those moves lifts the score, and the score is what converts a competitive product into a winning bid. This is the procurement reality behind the headline market numbers, and it is inseparable from the broader localisation pressure shaping how Gulf majors buy.
It also sits alongside the other supplier-qualification gates that now decide Gulf and global energy tenders, from carbon-data disclosure to procurement-ready documentation. Local content is the most consequential of them in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, but it is rarely the only one a serious supplier has to clear.
Weighting
The score is applied as a percentage weighting at commercial evaluation: a higher local-content score can beat a lower price.
Threshold
Many entities set a minimum score a bidder must clear to qualify at all, and a tie-breaker between comparable bids.
Footprint
Lifting the score means local manufacturing, local procurement, joint ventures and the employment of nationals, a multi-year build.
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For an international supplier entering the Gulf, which local-content move lifts the score fastest?
Frequently asked
IKTVA stands for In-Kingdom Total Value Add. It is Saudi Aramco’s local-content programme, launched in 2015, which scores suppliers on how much of their value is created inside Saudi Arabia and weights that score in Aramco’s procurement.
ICV stands for In-Country Value. It is the UAE’s local-content programme, launched by ADNOC in 2018 and now run nationally by the Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology (MoIAT), which scores suppliers on the value they retain in the UAE economy.
Both express local content as a percentage. Local spending on goods and services, local manufacturing, capital investment and the salaries and training of national employees are added up and divided by the supplier’s total revenue. The figure is calculated from audited data and certified by an approved third party.
In ADNOC and Aramco tenders the score is applied as a weighting at the commercial-evaluation stage, so a higher score can beat a lower price. Across the Gulf it is also used as an eligibility threshold and as a tie-breaker between comparable bids, so it often decides the award.
No. The programmes are separate. An IKTVA score earned with Aramco does not apply to a bid in the UAE, and an ADNOC ICV certificate does not count in Saudi Arabia. A supplier selling into both markets must certify in each one, which is part of why Gulf market entry is a multi-year commitment. For where that spend actually sits, see our analysis of the GCC oilfield services market in 2026.
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