QATAR

ANALYSIS OF QATAR’S TRADE: DATA, PRODUCTS & PROCEDURES, FOR MORE DETAILED INFORMATION OR A SPECIFIC MARKET INTELLIGENCE MATTER OR ANY OTHER MATTER PLEASE CONTACT US

1. MACROECONOMIC TRADE CONTEXT

Annual Trade Volume 2024:

  • Total Trade: QR 476.3 billion (≈ US$130.9 billion) ↑ 1.3% from 2023 
  • Exports: QR 346.0 billion (≈ US$95.04 billion) 
  • Imports: QR 130.3 billion (≈ US$35.8 billion) ↑ from 2023 
  • Trade Balance: QR +215.6 billion surplus (≈ US$+59.2 billion) 
  • Trade-to-GDP Ratio: ~90.8% (average 2017-2020) 
  • Global Rank: 44th largest exporter, 68th largest importer (2024) 
  • World Export Share: 0.4% 
  • Currency: Qatari Riyal (QAR), pegged to USD at US$1 = QR 3.64 (fixed since 1980)
  • GDP Per Capita: US$81,400 (10th highest globally) 

Geographic Distribution 2024:

EXPORT MARKETS (US$95.04B):

RankCountryExport Value (US$)Share of Total
1China18.9 billion ~20% 
2South Korea12.8 billion ~14% 
3India11.2 billion ~12% 
4Japan6.7 billion ~7.5% 
5Singapore6.7 billion ~7.4% 

By Geographic Region :

  • Asia: 77.2% of total exports (US$73.4 billion)
  • GCC Countries: 10.7% (US$10.2 billion)
  • European Union: 8.1% (US$7.7 billion)
  • United States: 1.6% (US$1.5 billion)

IMPORT ORIGINS (US$35.8B):

RankCountryImport Value (US$)Share of Total
1China5.4 billion 15.1% 
2United States4.6 billion 12.6% 
3Italy2.0 billion 5.7% 
4India1.9 billion 5.6% 
5Japan1.8 billion 5.1% 

By Geographic Region :

  • Asia: 40.2% of total imports
  • European Union: 25.3%
  • United States: 12.9%
  • GCC Countries: 11.4%

Economic Complexity Rankings (2024):

IndicatorRankScore
Economic Complexity Index (Trade)74th of 130-0.20 
Economic Complexity Index (Technology)76th of 96-1.01 (2021) 
Economic Complexity Index (Research)52nd of 1380.11 

2. DETAILED EXPORT PRODUCT ANALYSIS

A. MINERAL FUELS, OILS & DISTILLATION PRODUCTS (HS 27) – Dominant Share

1. Petroleum Gas (LNG/NGL): US$44.6 billion (50.3% of total exports) 

  • World’s largest LNG exporter (tied with Australia)
  • Production capacity: 77 million tons per annum (expanding to 126 MTPA by 2027)
  • North Field: World’s largest non-associated gas field (shared with Iran)
  • Major projects: North Field East (NFE) expansion, North Field South (NFS)
  • Primary Destinations: China, India, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Pakistan
  • Key Company: QatarEnergy (state-owned)

2. Crude Petroleum: US$21.0 billion (23.7% of total exports) 

  • Production capacity: ~600,000 barrels per day
  • Major fields: Al-Shaheen (offshore), Dukhan (onshore), Bul Hanine, Maydan Mahzam
  • Crude grades: Qatar Marine, Qatar Land
  • Primary Destinations: China, Japan, South Korea, India, Taiwan

3. Refined Petroleum Products: US$12.0 billion (13.5% of total exports) 

  • Refining capacity: Ras Laffan (146,000 bpd), Messaieed (137,000 bpd)
  • Products: Naphtha, gasoil, jet fuel, fuel oil
  • Export Destinations: Regional markets, Asia, Africa

Mineral Fuels Total: US$79.6 billion (89.8% of total exports) 

B. CHEMICAL PRODUCTS

1. Plastics and Articles Thereof (HS 39): US$2.64 billion (3.0% of total exports) 

  • Ethylene Polymers: US$1.96 billion 
  • Polyethylene: High-density (HDPE), low-density (LDPE), linear low-density (LLDPE)
  • Polypropylene
  • Primary Destinations: China, India, Turkey, Egypt
  • Key Companies: QatarEnergy, QAPCO, Q-Chem

2. Fertilizers (HS 31): US$1.85 billion (2.1% of total exports) 

  • Nitrogenous Fertilizers: US$1.81 billion 
  • Urea: World-scale production (QAFCO – world’s largest single-site urea producer)
  • Ammonia
  • Primary Destinations: India, Brazil, Australia, USA, Pakistan

3. Organic Chemicals (HS 29): US$1.08 billion (1.2% of total exports) 

  • Methanol
  • Olefins (ethylene, propylene)
  • Primary Destinations: China, India, South Korea

4. Inorganic Chemicals (HS 28): US$526 million (0.6% of total exports) 

C. METALS AND MINERALS

1. Aluminum and Articles Thereof (HS 76): US$1.88 billion (2.1% of total exports) 

  • Primary aluminum: Qatalum (Qatar Aluminium) – one of world’s largest smelters
  • Capacity: 630,000 metric tons per annum
  • Value-added products: Extrusions, billets, foundry alloys
  • Primary Destinations: Japan, South Korea, USA, Europe

2. Iron and Steel (HS 72): US$690 million (0.8% of total exports) 

  • Steel products: Rebar, sections
  • Key Company: Qatar Steel

3. Copper and Articles: US$153 million 

D. OTHER EXPORTS

HS CodeProduct CategoryExport Value (US$)
89Ships, boats, floating structures1.06 billion 
84Machinery, nuclear reactors, boilers799 million 
87Vehicles (non-railway)721 million 
88Aircraft, spacecraft540 million 
85Electrical equipment329 million 
25Salt, sulphur, earth, stone, plaster326 million 
71Pearls, precious stones, metals, coins268 million 
38Miscellaneous chemical products247 million 

Re-exports: Growing segment due to logistics infrastructure and Qatar Airways cargo capacity

E. SERVICES EXPORTS

  • Transport Services: Qatar Airways cargo and passenger services
  • Travel and Tourism: Post-World Cup 2022 growth, 5 million+ visitors (2024) 
  • Financial Services: Growing regional hub
  • Business Services: Headquarters services, professional services

3. DETAILED IMPORT PRODUCT ANALYSIS

A. MACHINERY AND TRANSPORT EQUIPMENT

1. Machinery, mechanical appliances, parts (HS 84): US$3.52 billion (9.9% of total imports) 

  • Industrial machinery: For oil/gas, construction, manufacturing
  • Power generation equipment: Turbines, generators
  • Construction machinery: Excavators, loaders, cranes
  • Pumps and compressors
  • Primary Sources: USA, Germany, China, Italy, Japan

2. Electrical machinery and electronics (HS 85): US$1.11 billion (3.1% of total imports) 

  • Telecommunications equipment
  • Consumer electronics
  • Electrical transformers and converters
  • Primary Sources: China, USA, South Korea, Japan

3. Aircraft and spacecraft (HS 88): US$568 million (1.6% of total imports) 

  • Commercial aircraft (Qatar Airways expansion)
  • Parts and components
  • Primary Sources: USA (Boeing), France (Airbus)

4. Ships, boats, floating structures (HS 89): US$405 million 

B. VEHICLES AND TRANSPORT EQUIPMENT

1. Cars, tractors, trucks & parts (HS 87): US$1.28 billion (3.6% of total imports) 

  • Passenger vehicles: Toyota, Nissan, Lexus, Mercedes, BMW, Audi
  • Luxury SUVs and sedans
  • Commercial vehicles
  • Auto parts and accessories
  • Primary Sources: Japan, USA, Germany, South Korea

C. METALS AND METAL PRODUCTS

1. Articles of iron or steel (HS 73): US$484 million 

2. Iron and steel (HS 72): US$345 million 

3. Aluminum articles: US$142 million 

D. PRECIOUS METALS AND STONES

1. Pearls, precious stones, metals, coins (HS 71): US$2.16 billion (6.1% of total imports) 

  • Gold and jewellery
  • Primary Sources: Switzerland, UAE, India

E. CHEMICAL AND RELATED PRODUCTS

1. Pharmaceutical products: US$705 million (est.) 

2. Organic chemicals: US$148 million 

3. Miscellaneous chemical products: US$294 million 

F. OTHER IMPORT CATEGORIES

HS CodeProduct CategoryImport Value (US$)
39Plastics and articles544 million 
90Optical, medical apparatus794 million 
94Furniture, lighting, signs563 million 
28Inorganic chemicals705 million 
48Paper and paperboard164 million 
62/61Apparel and clothing451 million combined 
64Footwear167 million 

G. MINERAL FUELS IMPORTS (HS 27): US$412 million 

  • Despite being major exporter, imports specific products/grade

H. SERVICES IMPORTS

  • Transport Services: Freight, logistics
  • Travel Services: Outbound tourism
  • Business Services: Consulting, professional services

4. TRADE PROCEDURES & REGULATIONS – DEEP DIVE

A. CUSTOMS LEGAL FRAMEWORK

1. Primary Authority:

  • General Authority of Customs (الهيئة العامة للجمارك)
  • Website: customs.gov.qa
  • Role: Customs administration, border control, duty collection

2. Legal Basis:

  • Customs Law: Law No. 40 of 2002 (as amended)
  • Executive Bylaw of the Customs Law: Cabinet Resolution No. 21 of 2004
  • GCC Common Customs Law (applicable within GCC framework)

3. GCC Customs Union:

  • Members: Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman
  • Established: 2003 (fully operational 2015)
  • Common External Tariff: 5% on most imports
  • GCC-wide customs declaration accepted
  • Revenue distribution mechanism among member states

4. 2024 Customs Law Amendments (December 2024) 

Cabinet Decision Amending Customs Law Provisions:

AmendmentPurpose
Streamlined proceduresReduce release times at ports
Simplified documentationDigital-first approach
Enhanced risk managementAI-based targeting
Expedited clearanceFor trusted traders

Key Exemptions Approved :

  • Ministry of Defense imports: Customs duties exempted
  • Strategic materials: For national projects

B. IMPORT PROCEDURES

1. Import Documentation Requirements:

Mandatory Documents:

  1. Commercial Invoice (original, detailed description, value, terms)
  2. Bill of Lading / Air Waybill (original negotiable document)
  3. Packing List (detailed weight, dimensions, contents)
  4. Certificate of Origin (for preferential tariff claims)
  5. Import Declaration (electronic via customs systems)
  6. Insurance Certificate (for CIF shipments)

2. Import Licensing Categories:

Prohibited Imports:

  • Alcoholic beverages (restricted to licensed entities only)
  • Pork products (restricted to non-Muslim consumers, licensed importers)
  • Narcotic drugs
  • Firearms and ammunition (except with special license from Ministry of Interior)
  • Pornographic materials
  • Certain chemicals
  • Gambling tools and equipment
  • Idols and statues for worship (non-Islamic religious items for personal use may be allowed)

Restricted Imports (Require Prior Approval):

Product CategoryRegulating Authority
Food ProductsMinistry of Public Health
PharmaceuticalsMinistry of Public Health
Medical DevicesMinistry of Public Health
CosmeticsMinistry of Public Health
Agricultural ProductsMinistry of Municipality
Live AnimalsMinistry of Municipality
ChemicalsMinistry of Environment and Climate Change
Telecommunications EquipmentCommunications Regulatory Authority (CRA)
Weapons/ExplosivesMinistry of Interior
Precious Metals/StonesSpecified testing/certification required

3. Conformity Assessment:

Qatar Standards (QS):

  • Qatar General Organization for Standards and Metrology (QS) – now part of Ministry of Commerce and Industry
  • Mandatory certification for regulated products
  • Recognized international testing labs
  • Product categories: Electronics, electrical goods, machinery, chemicals, building materials, toys, textiles, etc.

Gulf Conformity Mark (G-Mark) :

  • GCC-wide conformity mark
  • Accepted across all GCC member states
  • Facilitates market access to entire Gulf region

4. Customs Clearance Process:

Electronic Systems:

  • Al Nadeeb System: Customs declaration and processing platform
  • Single Window: Integrated with other government agencies

Clearance Channels:

ChannelInspection Level
GreenNo inspection (low-risk, compliant importers)
YellowDocument verification only
RedPhysical inspection required

Average Clearance Times:

  • Post-2024 reforms: Reduced significantly 
  • Green Channel: 2-4 hours
  • Yellow Channel: 24-48 hours
  • Red Channel: 2-3 days

C. TAXATION & DUTIES

1. Customs Duties:

GCC Common External Tariff :

  • Standard Rate: 5% on most imports (CIF value)
  • Exempt: Certain food items, medical supplies, books
  • Higher Rates: Tobacco (100%), alcohol (prohibited except licensed)
  • Duty-Free: GCC-originating goods (under GCC Customs Union)

Preferential Rates:

  • GAFTA (Greater Arab Free Trade Area): 0% on qualifying Arab origin goods
  • Singapore FTA: Preferential rates under GCC-Singapore FTA
  • EFTA FTA: With Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein

2. Corporate Tax:

  • Standard Rate: 10% on resident companies
  • Oil and Gas Operations: 35% (under specific agreements)
  • No Personal Income Tax

3. Value Added Tax (VAT):

  • Status: Not implemented (planned but postponed)
  • GCC VAT Framework Agreement signed, implementation delayed

4. Excise Tax:

  • Selective implementation on tobacco, energy drinks
  • Rates aligned with GCC framework

5. Customs Duty Exemptions:

Qualifying Entities/Bodies:

  • Government agencies (for official use)
  • Diplomatic missions (reciprocal basis)
  • Charitable organizations (approved projects)
  • Industrial license holders (machinery and raw materials)
  • Investors under foreign investment licenses (capital goods)

2024 Defense Exemption :

  • Cabinet decision exempting Ministry of Defense imports from customs duties

D. SPECIAL TRADE REGIMES

1. Bonded Warehousing:

  • Customs Bonded Warehouses: Storage without duty payment
  • Purpose: For re-export or subsequent local release
  • Maximum storage: 2 years (extendable)
  • Requirements: Bonded warehouse license from General Authority of Customs

2. Temporary Admission:

  • For goods imported for specific purpose and re-export
  • Exhibitions, professional equipment, samples
  • Time limit: 6 months (extendable to 12 months)
  • Security: Bank guarantee or cash deposit

3. Re-export Procedure:

  • For goods imported and then re-exported without processing
  • Simplified documentation
  • Time limit: Usually 6 months

4. Free Zones:

Qatar Free Zones Authority (QFZA):

  • Ras Bufontas Free Zone (near Hamad International Airport)
  • Umm Alhoul Free Zone (near Hamad Port)

Benefits:

  • 100% foreign ownership
  • Duty-free imports
  • Tax holidays (up to 20 years, renewable)
  • No corporate tax for up to 20 years
  • No personal income tax
  • Simplified company formation
  • World-class infrastructure

Strategic Sectors:

  • Logistics and supply chain
  • Manufacturing and assembly
  • Technology and innovation
  • Maritime services
  • Aviation services

E. SECTOR-SPECIFIC REGULATIONS

1. Law No. 9 of 2024 on Regulated Products 

Effective Date: 2024 (published in Official Gazette)

Scope: Petroleum, chemical, and petrochemical products, fertilizers, and derivatives produced in Qatar subject to government oversight.

Key Provisions:

ArticleContent
Chapter 2Establishes Qatar Energy Marketing and Trading Company (renamed from Qatar Petroleum for the Sale of Petroleum Products Ltd.)
Ownership TransferFull ownership of Qatar Chemical and Petrochemical Marketing and Distribution Company (Muntajat) transferred to new entity
Exclusive RightsNew company granted exclusive rights to deal in and trade regulated products domestically and internationally
Article 5Nine core principles: efficient marketing, global competitiveness, maximizing market value, fair dealing, transparent service acquisition, avoiding negative impacts on producers, risk management, high business integrity, transparency
Article 8Minister’s authority to: consult with producers on new regulated products, set sale start dates, amend regulated products list, impose financial penalties for violations
Article 14Prohibits: (i) selling regulated products to anyone other than the Company; (ii) purchasing from Company with intent to export; (iii) obtaining products based on false information; (iv) continuing to receive allocation after reason expires; (v) using products for unauthorized purposes
Article 15Penalties for violations

Repealed Legislation:

  • Decree-Law No. 15 of 2007
  • Decree-Law No. 11 of 2012

2. Food and Agricultural Products:

Ministry of Public Health Requirements:

  • SFDA-equivalent registration for food facilities
  • Product registration for imported foods
  • Halal certification for meat and poultry (from approved bodies)
  • Batch release certificates for certain products
  • Shelf life requirements: Minimum 50% remaining on arrival
  • Labeling: Arabic mandatory, production and expiry dates

3. Pharmaceutical Products:

Ministry of Public Health – Drug Control Department:

  • Registration required for all pharmaceuticals
  • GMP certification from country of origin
  • Marketing authorization
  • Batch testing for certain products
  • Cold chain requirements for temperature-sensitive products

4. Cosmetics and Personal Care:

Ministry of Public Health:

  • Product notification required
  • Safety assessment reports
  • GMP certification recommended
  • Labeling: Arabic required, ingredient list

5. Telecommunications Equipment:

Communications Regulatory Authority (CRA):

  • Type approval required
  • Product registration in CRA database
  • Testing by accredited labs
  • RF compliance certification

6. Electrical and Electronic Equipment:

Ministry of Commerce and Industry:

  • Qatar Standards (QS) compliance
  • G-Mark for GCC-wide acceptance
  • Energy efficiency labeling required for appliances
  • Low Voltage and EMC compliance

F. COMPLIANCE & ENFORCEMENT

1. Risk Management System:

General Authority of Customs uses:

  • Automated risk profiling of importers/exporters
  • Green/Yellow/Red Channel selection
  • Post-clearance audit for high-risk transactions
  • Data sharing with other GCC customs authorities

2. Authorized Economic Operator (AEO):

Program Status: Under development (aligned with GCC framework)

Anticipated Benefits:

  • Expedited customs clearance
  • Reduced physical inspections
  • Priority processing
  • Mutual recognition with other GCC countries

3. Penalties for Violations:

ViolationPenalty
Under-declaration50-100% of evaded duty + fines
MisclassificationDuty adjustment + administrative fine
False documentationFine up to QR 50,000 + possible criminal prosecution
SmugglingImprisonment (up to 3 years) + fine (up to QR 500,000)
Unauthorized importsConfiscation + fines
Regulated products violations (Law 9/2024)Financial penalties as specified 

4. Appeals Process:

  1. Objection to General Authority of Customs within 30 days
  2. Appeal to Customs Appeals Committee
  3. Judicial review to administrative courts

5. TRADE AGREEMENTS NETWORK

A. MULTILATERAL AGREEMENTS:

AgreementStatusCoverage
WTOMember since 1996Multilateral trade rules
GCC Customs UnionMember since 2003Duty-free intra-GCC trade, common external tariff
GAFTA (Greater Arab Free Trade Area)MemberDuty-free trade with 17 Arab League members

B. FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS:

PartnerStatusType
EFTA States (Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein)Signed 2009Free Trade Agreement (under GCC-EFTA FTA)
SingaporeSigned 2008GCC-Singapore FTA
European Free Trade AssociationSigned 2009GCC-EFTA FTA

C. NEGOTIATING FTAs:

PartnerStatus
European UnionGCC-EU FTA negotiations (suspended)
United KingdomPost-Brexit continuity agreement under negotiation
ChinaGCC-China FTA negotiations (ongoing)
IndiaGCC-India FTA negotiations (ongoing)
PakistanGCC-Pakistan FTA negotiations (ongoing)
AustraliaGCC-Australia FTA negotiations (ongoing)
New ZealandGCC-New Zealand FTA negotiations (ongoing)

D. BILATERAL INVESTMENT TREATIES:

  • 40+ BITs with major trading partners
  • Double Taxation Agreements: 50+ countries

6. MAJOR TRADE INFRASTRUCTURE

A. PORTS (managed by Mwani Qatar):

Hamad Port (Main Commercial Port):

  • Location: South of Doha (Al Wakrah)
  • Opened: 2017
  • Annual Capacity: 7.5 million TEU (expandable to 12 million TEU)
  • Container Terminals: 3 container terminals
  • General Cargo Terminal: 1.7 million tons capacity
  • Vehicle Terminal: 1 million vehicles capacity
  • Grain Terminal: Strategic food security facility
  • Connectivity: Linked to Qatar Rail and highway network
  • Depth: 17 meters (capable of handling largest container vessels)

Ras Laffan Port:

  • Location: Northeast coast
  • Specialization: LNG and petroleum exports
  • Capacity: World’s largest LNG export facility
  • Operator: QatarEnergy
  • Features: Multiple LNG berths, product export facilities

Mesaieed Port:

  • Location: South of Doha
  • Specialization: Industrial and bulk cargo
  • Cargo: Petrochemicals, refined products, sulfur, steel
  • Industrial integration: Adjacent to Mesaieed Industrial City

Doha Port:

  • Location: Central Doha
  • Current use: Cruise ships, traditional dhows, coastal trade
  • Future: Redevelopment planned (waterfront project)

B. AIRPORTS:

Hamad International Airport (HIA):

  • Cargo Throughput: 2.5+ million tons annually
  • Cargo Capacity: 3.2 million tons (expansion ongoing)
  • Cargo Terminals: Multiple cargo terminals
  • Qatar Airways Cargo: One of world’s top air cargo carriers
  • Pharma Corridor: Temperature-controlled pharma logistics
  • Fresh Corridor: Perishables handling
  • Live animals: Specialized facility

C. FREE ZONES:

Ras Bufontas Free Zone:

  • Location: Adjacent to Hamad International Airport
  • Focus: Logistics, light manufacturing, technology
  • Features: Direct airside access, bonded logistics

Umm Alhoul Free Zone:

  • Location: Adjacent to Hamad Port
  • Focus: Maritime industries, logistics, heavy manufacturing
  • Features: Direct port access, deep-water berths

D. LAND BORDER CROSSINGS:

Abu Samra Border Crossing:

  • Neighbor: Saudi Arabia
  • Status: Reopened 2021 (post-blockade resolution)
  • Route: Main land route to GCC countries
  • Facilities: Modern customs and immigration complex

E. INDUSTRIAL CITIES:

Mesaieed Industrial City:

  • Petrochemicals, steel, aluminum, fertilizers
  • Integrated port facilities
  • Heavy industries

Ras Laffan Industrial City:

  • LNG production and export
  • Gas processing
  • Associated industries

Qatar Science and Technology Park (QSTP):

  • R&D and innovation
  • Technology incubation
  • Free zone benefits

F. LOGISTICS INFRASTRUCTURE:

  • Bonded logistics zones at Hamad Port and Hamad International Airport
  • Cold chain facilities for food and pharmaceuticals
  • E-commerce logistics hubs (under development)
  • Last-mile delivery networks expanding

7. EMERGING TRENDS & FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS

A. North Field LNG Expansion:

Project Scope:

  • North Field East (NFE): 32 MTPA capacity increase
  • North Field South (NFS): 16 MTPA capacity increase
  • Total capacity: From 77 MTPA to 126 MTPA by 2027
  • Investment: US$45+ billion

Trade Impact:

  • LNG exports projected to increase 60%+
  • Strengthened position as world’s largest LNG exporter
  • Long-term contracts with China, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, European buyers

B. Economic Diversification (Qatar National Vision 2030):

Non-Hydrocarbon Growth:

  • Non-hydrocarbon sectors grew 4.5% in 2024 
  • Construction sector: +7.7% 
  • Finance and insurance: +10.6% 
  • Transport and warehousing: +5.4% 
  • Trade and retail: +3.5% 

Mining and quarrying share of GDP: Decreased to 35.8% (from 37.4% in 2023) 

C. 2024 Regulatory Reforms:

Law No. 9 of 2024 on Regulated Products :

  • Consolidated marketing of petroleum, chemical, and petrochemical products
  • Qatar Energy Marketing and Trading Company established as exclusive marketer
  • Streamlined export procedures for regulated products
  • Enhanced transparency and efficiency

Customs Law Amendments (December 2024) :

  • Eased procedures at ports
  • Reduced release times
  • Exemptions for Ministry of Defense imports
  • Digital transformation acceleration

Tax Law Amendments (2024) :

  • Draft law amending Income Tax Law (Law No. 24 of 2018)
  • Minimum supplementary tax for multinational companies (OECD/G20 BEPS compliance)
  • Alignment with international best practices

D. Digital Transformation:

AI and Digitalization Strategy :

  • IMF assessment: Qatar well-positioned to benefit from AI adoption
  • Digital trade platforms integration
  • Smart port initiatives at Hamad Port
  • Blockchain pilots for trade documentation

E-Government Services:

  • Single window for trade documentation
  • Electronic customs declarations
  • Digital certificates of origin

E. Food Security Initiatives:

Strategic Objectives:

  • Domestic production capacity expansion
  • Strategic grain silos at Hamad Port
  • International agricultural investments
  • Cold chain infrastructure development

Imports Strategy:

  • Diversified sources (reducing single-country dependence)
  • Long-term supply agreements
  • Quality and safety focus

F. Trade Policy Developments:

GCC Integration:

  • Enhanced customs union implementation
  • 45th GCC Supreme Council meeting (Kuwait, December 2024) 
  • Common market deepening
  • Unified trade policy coordination

Bilateral Trade Agreements:

  • Qatar-Uzbekistan Joint Committee (2024) 
  • Qatar-Pakistan Air Services Agreement (2024) 
  • Ongoing FTA negotiations via GCC framework

G. Post-World Cup Economic Transition:

Tourism Growth:

  • 5 million+ visitors in 2024 
  • Cruise ship tourism expansion
  • Business and MICE tourism growth
  • Hotel and hospitality sector maturation

Real Estate and Construction:

  • Infrastructure legacy utilization
  • New project pipeline (non-World Cup related)
  • Private sector participation

8. KEY CONTACTS & RESOURCES

A. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES:

  1. General Authority of Customs
    • Website: customs.gov.qa
    • Customer Service: 109
    • Email: info@customs.gov.qa
    • Address: Airport Road, Doha, Qatar
  2. Ministry of Commerce and Industry
  3. Qatar Free Zones Authority (QFZA)
    • Website: qfza.gov.qa
    • Email: info@qfza.gov.qa
    • Investor Services: invest@qfza.gov.qa
  4. QatarEnergy
    • Website: qatarenergy.qa
    • Marketing and Trading: marketing@qatarenergy.qa
  5. Ministry of Public Health
    • Website: moph.gov.qa
    • Drug Control: drug.control@moph.gov.qa
    • Food Safety: food.safety@moph.gov.qa
  6. Communications Regulatory Authority (CRA)
    • Website: cra.gov.qa
    • Type Approval: typeapproval@cra.gov.qa
  7. Planning and Statistics Authority
    • Website: psa.gov.qa
    • Trade Statistics: statistics@psa.gov.qa

B. BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS:

  1. Qatar Chamber of Commerce and Industry
    • Website: qatarchamber.com
    • Certificate of Origin: origin@qatarchamber.com
    • International Relations: international@qatarchamber.com
  2. Qatar Financial Centre (QFC)
    • Website: qfc.qa
    • Company Registration: register@qfc.qa
  3. Qatar Development Bank
    • Website: qdb.qa
    • Export Financing: export@qdb.qa

C. TRADE PORTALS AND DIGITAL PLATFORMS:

PlatformPurposeWebsite
Al NadeebCustoms declarationscustoms.gov.qa/alnadeeb
Single WindowIntegrated trade platformsinglewindow.gov.qa
HukoomiGovernment services portalhukoomi.gov.qa
Invest QatarInvestment promotioninvest.gov.qa
Business.gov.qaBusiness registrationbusiness.gov.qa

D. PRACTICAL GUIDANCE FOR TRADERS:

For Exporters to Qatar:

  1. GCC Standards Compliance: Products must meet GCC standards (G-mark) or Qatari standards (QS)
  2. Halal Certification: Required for all meat and poultry imports; must be from approved bodies
  3. Arabic Labeling: Mandatory for all consumer products (ingredients, expiry dates, warnings)
  4. Ministry Approvals: Food, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics require prior MOPH registration
  5. Law No. 9/2024 Compliance: Regulated products (petroleum, chemicals, fertilizers) must be exported through Qatar Energy Marketing and Trading Company 
  6. CRA Type Approval: Telecom equipment requires prior CRA approval
  7. Documentation Accuracy: Detailed description, correct HS codes, accurate valuation essential
  8. Free Zone Benefits: Consider QFZA free zones for logistics/manufacturing operations
  9. Bonded Warehousing: Available for re-export operations

For Importers from Qatar:

  1. Certificate of Origin: Obtain from Qatar Chamber for preferential claims
  2. QatarEnergy Contracts: For LNG/petrochemicals, direct contracts with QatarEnergy or its marketing subsidiaries
  3. QAFCO Contracts: For urea/fertilizer purchases
  4. Qatalum Contracts: For aluminum purchases
  5. Logistics Planning: Hamad Port is main gateway; excellent connectivity
  6. Payment Terms: LCs common; open account possible after trust
  7. Quality Certificates: Available from manufacturers (internationally recognized)

9. ECONOMIC IMPACT & STRATEGIC POSITION

A. Trade Balance Dynamics:

YearTrade Balance (US$ billion)
2022~80.0 (peak)
2023~66.4
202459.2 

2024 Performance:

  • Trade surplus: US$59.2 billion 
  • Export value: US$95.04 billion 
  • Import value: US$35.8 billion 
  • Export-Import Coverage Ratio: 265%
  • Exports per capita: US$31,000 (8th highest globally) 

B. Global Strategic Position:

  1. LNG Superpower: World’s largest LNG exporter (tied with Australia)
  2. Petrochemical Leader: Major producer of polyethylene, urea, methanol
  3. Aluminum Producer: Qatalum among world’s largest and most efficient smelters
  4. GCC Member: Integrated with Gulf Cooperation Council economies
  5. Strategic Reserves: Hosts largest non-associated gas field (North Field)
  6. Energy Transition Role: Low-cost producer, long-term LNG contracts for Asia and Europe
  7. Global Investor: Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) – US$450+ billion sovereign wealth fund

C. Competitiveness Indicators:

IndicatorValueGlobal Rank
GDP Per CapitaUS$81,40010th 
Ease of Doing Business73.457th (2019)
Logistics Performance Index3.545th (2016)
Economic Complexity (Trade)-0.2074th of 130 
Economic Complexity (Technology)-1.0176th of 96 

D. National Development Strategy (NDS3) Priorities :

  • Workforce development: Building skilled labor force
  • Innovation promotion: R&D and technology adoption
  • Trade diversification: Expanding non-hydrocarbon exports
  • FDI attraction: Streamlined investment procedures
  • Private sector development: State-led to private sector-led growth

E. Challenges:

  1. Hydrocarbon Dependence: ~90% of exports from oil and gas
  2. Regional Geopolitics: Blockade (2017-2021) impact, GCC relations management
  3. Global Energy Transition: Long-term demand uncertainty for fossil fuels
  4. Small Domestic Market: 2.8 million population (85% expatriate)
  5. Climate Vulnerability: Extreme temperatures, water scarcity
  6. Economic Diversification Pace: Non-hydrocarbon growth improving but from low base
  7. Private Sector Development: Historically state-dominated

F. Opportunities:

  1. LNG Expansion: 60% capacity increase by 2027 
  2. Downstream Industries: Petrochemicals, specialty chemicals, plastics conversion
  3. Free Zones: Manufacturing, logistics, technology investment
  4. World Cup Legacy: Infrastructure, tourism, global profile
  5. Food Security: Domestic production, strategic sourcing
  6. Financial Services: Regional hub ambitions
  7. Technology and Innovation: AI, digitalization, smart city development
  8. Healthcare and Education: Growing sectors with export potential
  9. Logistics Hub: Hamad Port and Hamad International Airport connectivity
  10. Green Hydrogen: Production and export potential using natural gas

SUMMARY OF QATAR’S TRADE CHARACTERISTICS:

  1. LNG Superpower: 90% of exports from oil and gas; world’s largest LNG exporter 
  2. Massive Trade Surplus: US$59.2 billion surplus in 2024, export-import coverage ratio 265% 
  3. Asian Market Focus: 77% of exports to Asia, with China (#1), South Korea (#2), India (#3) as top partners 
  4. Petrochemical Leader: Top 5 exporter of polyethylene, urea, methanol globally
  5. Aluminum Powerhouse: Qatalum smelter among world’s largest and most efficient
  6. 2024 Regulatory Reforms: Law No. 9 on Regulated Products (Qatar Energy Marketing exclusive rights), Customs Law amendments easing procedures 
  7. GCC Integration: Deep integration in Gulf Cooperation Council customs union and trade framework 
  8. Strategic Infrastructure: Hamad Port (7.5M TEU capacity), Hamad International Airport (3.2M tons cargo), world-class free zones
  9. High Per Capita Exports: US$31,000 per person (8th highest globally) 
  10. Vision 2030 Diversification: Non-hydrocarbon growth 4.5% in 2024, construction (+7.7%), finance (+10.6%) leading 

Qatar represents the world’s most consequential LNG exporter, combining vast natural gas resources with strategic infrastructure and ambitious economic diversification under Qatar National Vision 2030. With 90% of exports from hydrocarbons and a massive US$59.2 billion trade surplus in 2024, the country maintains one of the highest per capita export values globally.

The 2024 regulatory landscape saw transformative reforms: Law No. 9 on Regulated Products consolidated all petroleum, chemical, and fertilizer marketing under Qatar Energy Marketing and Trading Company ; Customs Law amendments streamlined port procedures and reduced clearance times ; and tax reforms aligned with OECD global minimum tax standards . The North Field LNG expansion (60% capacity increase by 2027) positions Qatar for continued energy dominance, while free zones attract manufacturing, logistics, and technology investment.

Qatar’s trade future depends on successful diversification under NDS3, capturing downstream value in petrochemicals, expanding non-hydrocarbon exports, and leveraging world-class infrastructure as a regional logistics hub. The country’s vast sovereign wealth fund (QIA) and strategic location give it unique advantages in navigating the global energy transition while building a sustainable, diversified economy.