Saudi Arabia Emerges Among Fastest Growing G20 Events Markets

General Authority for Exhibitions and Conferences Fahd al-Rasheed at the opening of IMS25 (Asharq Al-Awsat)
General Authority for Exhibitions and Conferences Fahd al-Rasheed at the opening of IMS25 (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Saudi Arabia Emerges Among Fastest Growing G20 Events Markets

General Authority for Exhibitions and Conferences Fahd al-Rasheed at the opening of IMS25 (Asharq Al-Awsat)
General Authority for Exhibitions and Conferences Fahd al-Rasheed at the opening of IMS25 (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Saudi Arabia is gearing up for what officials describe as a golden decade for business events, driven by unprecedented expansion in its exhibitions and conferences sector and a record jump in capacity, which rose 32 percent in a single year to 923 accredited venues.

This surge aligns with a broader vision led by the General Authority for Exhibitions and Conferences to redefine the role of events, positioning them not only as spaces for showcasing and meeting, but as platforms for problem solving, policy shaping, and cross sector alliances.

The authority’s chairman, Fahd al-Rasheed, said the kingdom is preparing for “a golden decade of major events,” headlined by Expo 2030 and the 2034 World Cup.

The momentum comes as Riyadh hosts the second International MICE Summit (IMS25), which brings together more than 2000 global industry leaders at a time when the kingdom is working to cement its position as the fastest growing business events market in the Group of Twenty.

Sector growth and companies

Al-Rasheed told Asharq Al-Awsat that the sector today records “one of the fastest growth rates among G20 countries,” with annual expansion close to 10 percent over the past five years and a direct economic contribution of about 10 billion riyals, equal to 2.7 billion dollars.

He said the global events industry is now valued at more than one trillion dollars and is expected to double in the coming decade, becoming one of the world’s strongest economic growth engines.

He added that the number of companies operating in Saudi Arabia has surged from just 400 in 2018 to 17000 today, a 330 percent increase that he described as “massive,” reflecting the scale of transformation across the industry.

Al-Rasheed said the congress will witness the announcement of five new global companies entering the Saudi market to manage exhibitions and conferences, raising the number of major international firms with local headquarters to 13 out of the world’s top 20, or 70 percent of leading global players in the sector.

Capacity expansion

The growth is matched by significant expansion in event infrastructure. Capacity has risen 32 percent in one year through a network of 923 accredited sites across the kingdom. Exhibition space has jumped 320 percent since 2018 to reach 300520 square meters.

About 90 percent of total capacity is concentrated in three main regions, Riyadh, Makkah, and the Eastern Province, through major facilities that include the Riyadh Exhibition and Convention Center in Mulham at 78000 square meters, Jeddah Superdome at 34000 square meters, and Dhahran Expo at 25600 square meters.

Other regions have also seen notable expansion with new centers, including the King Salman International Conference Center in Medina, the Maraya Hall in AlUla, the King Khalid University Center in Asir, and the Prince Mishaal Conference and Events Center in Najran.

Redefining the role of events

The sector’s momentum extends beyond quantitative growth to a redefinition of the economic and knowledge roles of events.

According to the authority’s vision, events are no longer only venues for display and gathering, but platforms for policy making, problem solving, and cross sector partnerships, Al Rasheed said.

He added that the kingdom is positioning itself as “a global hub where decision makers meet industry leaders,” stressing that the goal is “not only to host more events, but to contribute to solutions and launch initiatives that benefit global sectors.”

The international congress

The acceleration coincides with Riyadh hosting the second edition of the International Congress for the Exhibition Industry on November 26 and 27, 2025, with more than 2000 global industry leaders taking part.

Al-Rasheed said the congress offers a golden opportunity to link local policymakers with global leaders and strengthen cooperation between the public and private sectors, in line with Vision 2030 targets for tourism and the events industry, which aims to welcome 150 million visitors by 2030. Visitor numbers have already exceeded 60.9 million in the first half of 2025, with total tourism spending reaching 161.4 billion riyals, or 43 billion dollars.

This expansion signals Saudi Arabia’s shift into a global hub for events and business gatherings, where events have become engines of economic growth, accelerators of innovation, and tools for building strategic alliances.

With continued hosting of major events and rising investment in infrastructure and workforce training, the kingdom is reinforcing its position as a key destination for investors and global companies, opening a new chapter of opportunities for shaping the future of the global events industry.



Russia’s LNG Exports up 8.6% in January to April, Data Shows

A general view of the liquefied natural gas plant operated by Sakhalin Energy at Prigorodnoye on the Pacific island of Sakhalin, Russia July 15, 2021. (Reuters)
A general view of the liquefied natural gas plant operated by Sakhalin Energy at Prigorodnoye on the Pacific island of Sakhalin, Russia July 15, 2021. (Reuters)
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Russia’s LNG Exports up 8.6% in January to April, Data Shows

A general view of the liquefied natural gas plant operated by Sakhalin Energy at Prigorodnoye on the Pacific island of Sakhalin, Russia July 15, 2021. (Reuters)
A general view of the liquefied natural gas plant operated by Sakhalin Energy at Prigorodnoye on the Pacific island of Sakhalin, Russia July 15, 2021. (Reuters)

Russia's ‌exports of liquefied natural gas rose 8.6% in January to April to 11.4 million metric tons from the same period last year due to supplies from the Arctic LNG 2 project, which reached 1 million tons in the first four months of the year, preliminary LSEG data ‌showed on Tuesday.

US ‌sanctions against Moscow over ‌the ⁠Ukraine conflict have restrained ⁠Russian LNG exports, particularly from the Arctic LNG 2 plant, where operations have been hindered owing to difficulty securing buyers.

In April alone, total Russian exports of LNG rose ⁠13.2% from a year ago to ‌2.92 million ‌tons.

Data also showed that Russian LNG ‌exports to Europe in January to April ‌jumped 20.8% year-on-year to 6.4 million tons. In April, they rose to around 1.6 million tons from 1.2 million tons ‌a year earlier.

In January, EU countries gave their final ⁠approval ⁠to ban Russian gas imports by late-2027.

Total exports from Novatek's Yamal LNG plant in the January to April period fell by 1.5% year-on-year to 6.5 million tons.

Asia-oriented Sakhalin-2, controlled by Gazprom, exported 3.7 million tons in the first four months of the year, up from 3.6 million tons during the same period last year.


G7 Trade Ministers Set to Meet but Not Discuss Latest US Tariff Threat

Discussion of the repercussions of the Middle East war is expected to dominate an informal session on Tuesday. Ludovic MARIN / AFP/File
Discussion of the repercussions of the Middle East war is expected to dominate an informal session on Tuesday. Ludovic MARIN / AFP/File
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G7 Trade Ministers Set to Meet but Not Discuss Latest US Tariff Threat

Discussion of the repercussions of the Middle East war is expected to dominate an informal session on Tuesday. Ludovic MARIN / AFP/File
Discussion of the repercussions of the Middle East war is expected to dominate an informal session on Tuesday. Ludovic MARIN / AFP/File

G7 trade ministers are set to meet in Paris on Tuesday and Wednesday to discuss issues such as critical minerals and small packages but will not directly address the latest US threat to impose additional tariffs on European vehicles.

The second meeting of trade ministers under the French G7 presidency is taking place as the global economy has been upended by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world's oil normally flows, said AFP.

Discussion of the repercussions of the Middle East war is expected to dominate an informal session on Tuesday, according to the office of France's junior trade minister Nicolas Forissier.

Meanwhile President Donald Trump's threat last Friday that he will hike US tariffs on cars and trucks from the European Union will likely be addressed separately.

US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer is expected to meet with EU Trade Commission Maros Sefcovic in the French capital.

They also have a meeting scheduled with Forissier and French Economy Minister Roland Lescure.

The US and EU struck a deal last summer to cap US tariffs on EU autos and parts at 15 percent, which is lower than the 25-percent duty that Trump imposed on many other trading partners.

In late March, EU lawmakers gave their green light to the bloc's tariff deal with Trump, but with conditions. It must still be approved by member countries.

"Our position for the moment is not to overreact," said Forissier's office.

"We will discuss it among Europeans when the time comes, but in any case not within the framework of the G7," it added.

"This agreement is useful and we must continue to implement it."

- Four priorities -

On Wednesday the trade ministers of the G7 nations (Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States) are expected to discuss the four priorities set by the group's French presidency.

The first is find a collective and effective response to industrial overcapacity that undermines free trade.

Even if the discussion doesn't formally target China, the country's subsidizing of certain sectors has created trade tensions for years.

A second priority is economic security, in particular securing and diversifying supplies of critical minerals that are indispensable in producing strategic products such as computer chips, electric vehicle batteries and super magnets.

France favors creating a system of groups of producing, processing and consuming nations that share a commitment to implementing good practices.

- Small parcels, big problem -

The ministers will also touch on the failure in March of the latest round of World Trade Organization negotiations, with the body's role as a trade referee having been paralyzed by the United States for years.

"The goal is for this organization to be better suited to current challenges," Forissier's office said.

The ministers will also discuss cross-border sales via e-commerce sites which have generated huge volumes of small parcels that escaped customs duties and posed unfair competition to local retailers.

The US last year suspended the tariff exemption on small parcels valued at less than $800 and the EU will this summer put in place a flat-rate customs duty on packages valued at under 150 euros.

The summit of G7 heads of state and government is scheduled for June 15 to 17 in the eastern town Evian along the shore of Lake Geneva.


Egypt Aims for Self-Sufficiency in Wheat for Subsidized Bread in 2028, Minister Says

People are seen out at night in downtown Cairo on April 28, 2026. (AFP)
People are seen out at night in downtown Cairo on April 28, 2026. (AFP)
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Egypt Aims for Self-Sufficiency in Wheat for Subsidized Bread in 2028, Minister Says

People are seen out at night in downtown Cairo on April 28, 2026. (AFP)
People are seen out at night in downtown Cairo on April 28, 2026. (AFP)

Egypt, often the world's biggest wheat importer, aims to achieve self-sufficiency in wheat for its heavily subsidized bread in 2028, Agriculture Minister Alaa Farouk told Reuters on Tuesday.

Egypt needs 8.6 ‌million metric ‌tons of wheat for ‌its subsidized ⁠bread scheme, according ⁠to the draft budget for the full year of 2026/27, but the minister declined to give an estimate for how much wheat the government needs to achieve its self-sufficiency target.

The date Farouk gave is ⁠one year later than originally intended, ‌as the country ‌had hoped it would achieve the target by ‌2027, the head of Future of ‌Egypt Agency for Sustainable Development, the government's exclusive grain importer, had said during a conference in May 2025.

The Egyptian government offers competitive prices ‌to local farmers to cultivate wheat.

This season, which began mid-April, the government ⁠intends to ⁠buy 5 million tons of local wheat, Farouk said.

Procurement has so far exceeded that of last year but is lagging behind the 2024 harvest.

As of Tuesday, the government had bought 1.39 million tons, up by 17% from 1.19 million tons in the same period last year, but down by 13% from 1.6 million tons in 2024, according to official data seen by Reuters.