Red Sea Container Shipping Down 30% Over Attacks, Says IMF

Patrol boats affiliated with the Yemeni coast guard off the port of Mokha in the southern Red Sea (Saba News Agency)
Patrol boats affiliated with the Yemeni coast guard off the port of Mokha in the southern Red Sea (Saba News Agency)
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Red Sea Container Shipping Down 30% Over Attacks, Says IMF

Patrol boats affiliated with the Yemeni coast guard off the port of Mokha in the southern Red Sea (Saba News Agency)
Patrol boats affiliated with the Yemeni coast guard off the port of Mokha in the southern Red Sea (Saba News Agency)

Container shipping through the Red Sea has dropped by nearly one-third this year as attacks by Yemen's Houthis continue, the International Monetary Fund said Wednesday.

"Container shipping... has declined by almost 30 percent," said Jihad Azour, director of the IMF's Middle East and Central Asia department, adding that "the drop in trade accelerated in the beginning of this year".

The Iran-backed Houthis have launched more than 30 attacks on commercial shipping and naval vessels since November 19, the Pentagon said on Tuesday.

The Houthis say the attacks are in solidarity with the Palestinians and in protest of the Israel-Hamas war that has been raging in the Gaza Strip since October.

The IMF's PortWatch platform indicates that the total transit volume through the Suez Canal was down 37 percent this year through January 16 compared with the same period a year earlier.

The canal connects the Red Sea to the Mediterranean Sea.

Houthi attacks have prompted some shipping companies to detour around southern Africa to avoid the Red Sea, a vital route that normally carries about 12 percent of global trade, according to the International Chamber of Shipping, AFP reported.

"The level of uncertainty is extremely high and the developments will determine the extent of change and shift in trade patterns in terms of volume but also in terms of sustainability," Azour told reporters in an online briefing.

"Are we on the verge of major change in trade routes or is it temporary because of the increase in costs and the deterioration of the security costs?"

The Red Sea is particularly vital for European trade.

Last week the European Union's trade commissioner said maritime traffic through the Red Sea shipping route had fallen by 22 percent in a month because of the Houthi attacks.

The European Union is pushing to launch its own naval mission in the Red Sea to help protect international shipping.

EU countries have given initial backing to the plan and are aiming to finalize it by a meeting of the bloc's foreign ministers on February 19.

The United States and Britain have launched repeated strikes against Houthi capabilities in Yemen, but the Iran-backed movement is still able to hit vessels.

Wednesday's IMF briefing came as the Washington-based fund released a revised economic outlook for countries in the Middle East and North Africa due to the Israel-Hamas war.

The IMF now sees the economies of the region expanding 2.9 percent this year, a decrease of half a percentage point from its October forecast.

The economic downturn in the occupied West Bank and the war-ravaged Gaza Strip and was "immense", said Azour.

In 2023, real GDP growth in Gaza and the West Bank was estimated to have dropped to about minus six percent, the IMF said, adding it reflected a nine percentage points downgrade from its October outlook.

"We project that the economy will keep on contracting in 2024 if there is no fast and quick cessation of hostilities and reconstruction," Azour said.

For emerging market and middle-income economies in the region, total funding requirements over 2024 were projected to $186 billion, the IMF said, up from $156 billion in 2023.



Mega Projects Enhance Growth of Saudi Arabia’s Facilities Management

NEOM (Photo: Saudi PIF)
NEOM (Photo: Saudi PIF)
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Mega Projects Enhance Growth of Saudi Arabia’s Facilities Management

NEOM (Photo: Saudi PIF)
NEOM (Photo: Saudi PIF)

Mega Saudi projects have contributed to increasing the volume of facilities management investments, which are expected to exceed $60 billion during 2030.
Facilities management is defined as a comprehensive field that brings together the workplace (buildings and facilities), its workforce, and system operations.
It aims to ensure smooth workflow, improve the efficiency of using facilities, and create a safe and comfortable work environment.
The sector covers a wide range of services, including hard services such as mechanical and electrical maintenance, fire safety, and maintenance of building systems and equipment, and soft services such as cleaning, recycling, pest and infection control, floor maintenance and waste disposal.
An electronic platform was launched in 2023 to develop the sector.
In comments to Asharq Al-Awsat, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Saudi Facilities Management Association, Eng. Ayed Al-Qahtani, said that the volume of the sector is expected to reach $60 billion in 2030, with a 13.5 percent growth rate until the end of the decade.
Total government spending on the infrastructure and public services sector in the Saudi budget for 2023 amounted to about SAR 190 billion ($50.6 billion), of which facilities management constitutes a large part, according to Al-Qahtani.

According to MordorIntelligence’s expectations, the size of the facilities management market in Saudi Arabia will reach $49.6 billion by 2029, driven by many factors, including government investments in infrastructure projects.
For its part, P&S Intelligence believes that the market will grow at a compound annual rate of 12.4 percent, reaching $90.1 billion by the end of the current decade, pointing to increased construction activities in the country, a growing tourism industry, and over-reliance on advanced technologies.
Al-Qahtani stressed that the Kingdom’s market in the facilities management sector is the fastest growing in the world, with the entry of major international companies into the local market.
He revealed that the association intends to hold the International Facilities Management Conference and Exhibition in September, under the patronage of the Minister of Municipalities and Housing, Majid Al-Hogail, and in strategic partnership with the Saudi Facilities Management Company, which is owned by the Public Investment Fund.
The company was established in 2023 to meet the market needs and provide sector services for the Fund’s real estate development projects.
Al-Qahtani noted that the objectives of the upcoming conference were based on three elements: the quality of human life within the built environment, the role of artificial intelligence in facilities management, especially in light of recent developments and the global tech outage, in addition to the protection of data inside buildings.
He said he expects the event to witness the signing of 10 to 15 cooperation agreements.