Saudi Arabia Allocates Industrial Lands with Investments Exceeding $21 Bln

Jubail offers 100 investment opportunities with an estimated investment size of around $5.4 billion (SPA)
Jubail offers 100 investment opportunities with an estimated investment size of around $5.4 billion (SPA)
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Saudi Arabia Allocates Industrial Lands with Investments Exceeding $21 Bln

Jubail offers 100 investment opportunities with an estimated investment size of around $5.4 billion (SPA)
Jubail offers 100 investment opportunities with an estimated investment size of around $5.4 billion (SPA)

As part of its efforts to attract more local and foreign investments, the Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu in Saudi Arabia has allocated approximately 15.1 square kilometers of industrial land in its cities, with an investment volume exceeding SAR 80 billion Saudi riyals ($21.6 billion).

This initiative aims to double its investment size by 2040, currently estimated at around a trillion riyals.

It is anticipated that these investments in primary, mining, and transformational industries will generate over 16,000 direct job opportunities.

Eng. Khaled Al-Salem, the Chairman of the Commission, stated to Asharq Al-Awsat that these lands were designated at the beginning of 2023.

He explained that the Commission offers a multitude of investment opportunities, including those in the Jubail Industrial City, which presents over 100 investment prospects totaling more than SAR 20 billion ($5.4 billion), as well as in the Jazan Basic and Transformational Industries City, providing around 10 investment opportunities amounting to SAR 1.5 billion ($400 million) in both industrial and commercial sectors.

Al-Salem added that the available investment capacity in the Yanbu Industrial City is projected to exceed SAR 20 billion by 2025 and surpass SAR 100 billion ($26.6 billion) by 2040.

Furthermore, the investment opportunities estimated for Ras Al Khair Mining Industries City also exceed SAR 20 billion.

Regarding the pursuit of increasing the overall investment volume, Al-Salem emphasized that the Commission places significant emphasis on leveraging its success factors and the attractiveness of its cities for investments.

It aims to establish a seamless investment journey, with the total investment size in its cities already surpassing a trillion riyals by the end of 2022 and targeting to double that figure by 2040 according to its strategic plan.

Furthermore, the Commission aims to empower entrepreneurs, offering them training, technical consultations, and suitable investment options through its Industrial Development Centers, such as “ready-made factories” with low capital costs, enabling them to embark on their entrepreneurial journey.

Al-Salem revealed that the Commission has registered 16 projects led by 9 female entrepreneurs, with their investments estimated at around SAR 40 million ($10.6 million) in the cities of Jubail and Yanbu.

Addressing expansion efforts, Al-Salem explained that the Commission has a comprehensive plan for each of its cities, outlining the targeted industrial sectors and the planned development of lands over the coming years within its jurisdiction.

This approach aims to attract and foster industrial investments that contribute to enhancing Saudi Arabia’s position in various fundamental and transformative industrial sectors, aligning with the Kingdom’s national industrial strategy.



IMF: Middle East Conflict Escalation Could Have Significant Economic Consequences

Displaced families, mainly from Syria, gather at Beirut's central Martyrs' Square, where they spent the night fleeing the overnight Israeli strikes in Beirut, Lebanon September 28, 2024. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki
Displaced families, mainly from Syria, gather at Beirut's central Martyrs' Square, where they spent the night fleeing the overnight Israeli strikes in Beirut, Lebanon September 28, 2024. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki
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IMF: Middle East Conflict Escalation Could Have Significant Economic Consequences

Displaced families, mainly from Syria, gather at Beirut's central Martyrs' Square, where they spent the night fleeing the overnight Israeli strikes in Beirut, Lebanon September 28, 2024. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki
Displaced families, mainly from Syria, gather at Beirut's central Martyrs' Square, where they spent the night fleeing the overnight Israeli strikes in Beirut, Lebanon September 28, 2024. REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki

The International Monetary Fund said on Thursday that an escalation of the conflict in the Middle East could have significant economic ramifications for the region and the global economy, but commodity prices remain below the highs of the past year.

IMF spokesperson Julie Kozack told a regular news briefing that the Fund is closely monitoring the situation in southern Lebanon with "grave concern" and offered condolences for the loss of life.

"The potential for further escalation of the conflict heightens risks and uncertainty and could have significant economic ramifications for the region and beyond," Kozack said.

According to Reuters, she said it was too early to predict specific impacts on the global economy, but noted that economies in the region have already suffered greatly, especially in Gaza, where the civilian population "faces dire socioeconomic conditions, a humanitarian crisis and insufficient aid deliveries.

The IMF estimates that Gaza's GDP declined 86% in the first half of 2024, Kozack said, while the West Bank's first-half GDP likely declined 25%, with prospects of a further deterioration.

Israel's GDP contracted by about 20% in the fourth quarter of 2023 after the conflict began, and the country has seen only a partial recovery in the first half of 2024, she added.
The IMF will update its economic projections for all countries and the global economy later in October when the global lender and World Bank hold their fall meetings in Washington.
"In Lebanon, the recent intensification of the conflict is exacerbating the country's already fragile macroeconomic and social situation," Kozack said, referring to Israel's airstrikes on Hezbollah in Lebanon.
"The conflict has inflicted a heavy human toll on the country, and it has damaged physical infrastructure."
The main channels for the conflict to impact the global economy have been through higher commodity prices, including oil and grains, as well as increased shipping costs, as vessels avoid potential missile attacks by Yemen's Houthis on vessels in the Red Sea, Kozack said. But commodity prices are currently lower than their peaks in the past year.
"I just emphasize once again that we're closely monitoring the situation, and this is a situation of great concern and very high uncertainty," she added.
Lebanon in 2022 reached a staff-level agreement with the IMF on a potential loan program, but there has been insufficient progress on required reforms, Kozack said.
"We are prepared to engage with Lebanon on a possible financing program when the situation is appropriate to do so, but it would necessitate that the actions can be taken and decisive policy measures can be taken," Kozack added. "We are currently supporting Lebanon through capacity development assistance and other areas where possible."