Saudi Industry Ministry Qualifies 24 Local, International Bidders for Round 10 Exploration Licenses

The Saudi Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources announced the qualification of 24 local and international bidders to participate in Round 10 of the Kingdom’s exploration license competitions. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The Saudi Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources announced the qualification of 24 local and international bidders to participate in Round 10 of the Kingdom’s exploration license competitions. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Saudi Industry Ministry Qualifies 24 Local, International Bidders for Round 10 Exploration Licenses

The Saudi Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources announced the qualification of 24 local and international bidders to participate in Round 10 of the Kingdom’s exploration license competitions. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The Saudi Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources announced the qualification of 24 local and international bidders to participate in Round 10 of the Kingdom’s exploration license competitions. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources announced on Tuesday the qualification of 24 local and international bidders, including companies and consortiums, to participate in Round 10 of the Kingdom’s exploration license competitions, marking the start of the bidding phase following the completion of technical and financial evaluations.

In a statement, it said the announcement reflects the ministry’s continued efforts to accelerate mineral exploration, unlock its estimated $2.5 trillion mineral wealth while strengthening the Kingdom’s position as an attractive destination for mining investment.

Spokesperson of the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources Jarrah Aljarrah said that the mineralized belts offered in this round cover a total area of 13,000 km2 across five regions: Madinah, Makkah, Riyadh, Qassim, and Hail, and include new exploration sites extending from belts offered in the Round 9.

These include the Nabithah/Ad Duwayhi (Dahlat Shabeb) Belt, home to the Ad Duwayhi Mine, which produces around 180,000 ounces of gold annually; the Sukhaybarat/Al-Safra Belt, a highly prospective zone for gold, copper, silver, zinc, and nickel, hosting advanced projects such as the Sukhaybarat and Bulghah mines; and the Al-Nuqrah Belt, known for its significant gold deposits and copper- and zinc-rich volcanic massive sulfide (VMS) mineralization.

Of the 24 qualified bidders, 17 were previously pre-qualified under Round 9, while seven additional companies and consortia completed the Round 10 pre-qualification questionnaire (PQQ). The continued participation of previously qualified bidders highlights growing investor confidence in Saudi Arabia’s mining opportunities and reinforces the credibility and transparency of its licensing process.

The ministry noted that, under the exploration licensing competition guidelines, pre-qualification remains valid for one calendar year. This allows eligible bidders to participate in subsequent licensing rounds during the validity period and enables greater participation in the Kingdom’s expanding pipeline of exploration opportunities.

The seven pre-qualified bidders include: Saudi Arabian Mining Company (Maaden); PT ANTAM Tbk; Power Metallic Mines Inc.; Wildsky Resources Inc.; consortium comprising Danakali Limited and Masadar Al-Zamarda for Mining; consortium between Anaam Al Qarat for Trading and Sahara Mining Co. Ltd.; and Thurb Al-Hayya for Trading Company.

The list of bidders previously pre-qualified under Round 9 includes: Vedanta Limited; Midana Exploration Pty Ltd; Jacaranda Minerals Pty Ltd; Sierra Nevada Gold; Royal Road Arabia; The Distinguished Consortium Mining Company; Sun Peak Metals; Eqleed-Indotan Mining Company; DesertEx Pty Ltd; Helderberg Limited; Al Tasnim Enterprises LLC; Branch of China National Geological and Mining Corporation; Aurum Global Group; Batin Al Ard for Gold Company; Almasar Minerals Holding Limited; Saudi Gold Refinery (SGR); and Al Ghazal Al Arabi Mining Company.

Saudi Arabia’s exploration license competitions are conducted through a three-stage process designed to ensure transparency, competitiveness, and equal opportunity.

The process begins with a pre-qualification phase, during which applicants are assessed based on technical and financial capabilities. This is followed by the competition and site selection phase, where qualified bidders gain access to competition guidelines and relevant technical documentation and select sites through the ministry’s digital mining platform, Taadeen.

Where multiple bidders compete for the same site, the process advances to a public multi-round bidding process, with awards determined based on competitive exploration expenditure commitments and transparent evaluation criteria.

The next phase of Round 10 will see qualified bidders select available exploration sites through the Taadeen platform, in accordance with clear criteria designed to ensure fair competition and allow companies to pursue opportunities best aligned with their technical strengths and investment strategies.

Aljarrah, the ministry’s spokesperson, said the growing participation in exploration licensing rounds reflects rising confidence in the Kingdom’s mining investment environment, supported by regulatory reform, enhanced geological data, transparent licensing mechanisms, and an expanding portfolio of high-potential exploration opportunities across Saudi Arabia.

These results reflect the impact of the Kingdom’s ongoing regulatory and legislative reforms, which continue to strengthen investor confidence and reinforce Saudi Arabia’s position as a transparent, competitive, and globally attractive mining destination aligned with the objectives of Vision 2030.



Saudi Arabia, Canada Open New Investment Era in AI, Mining

Officials are seen at the Saudi-Canadian Investment Forum in Jeddah. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Officials are seen at the Saudi-Canadian Investment Forum in Jeddah. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Saudi Arabia, Canada Open New Investment Era in AI, Mining

Officials are seen at the Saudi-Canadian Investment Forum in Jeddah. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Officials are seen at the Saudi-Canadian Investment Forum in Jeddah. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Saudi Arabia and Canada have entered a new phase of strategic economic partnership, with both countries seeking to translate diplomatic momentum into commercial deals in mining, energy, artificial intelligence, data centers, financial services, and advanced industries.

Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, received Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney on an official visit that capped a year of intensified diplomatic and investment activity between the two countries.

The visit coincided with the Saudi-Canadian Investment Forum in Jeddah, where senior officials and business leaders from both sides met to shape a practical road map for moving relations from discussion to implementation.

Carney said Saudi Arabia had become one of the main pillars of the global economy, praising the sharp acceleration in its economic growth and the structural transformation taking place under Vision 2030.

Speaking on the sidelines of the forum, he said Canada was firmly committed to deepening cooperation with the Kingdom in strategic sectors, led by energy and mining.

The joint push aims to connect Canadian technology, innovation and capital with the scale of opportunities created by Vision 2030, particularly in financial services, mining, advanced industries, artificial intelligence and data centers.

Saudi Investment Minister Fahad Al-Saif said the Kingdom’s economy had grown from about $720 billion in 2017 to nearly $1.3 trillion. Non-oil activities now account for more than 50% of gross domestic product, while non-oil and non-government investment represent about 77% of total investment.

Al-Saif said the forum offered a practical platform to link Canada’s strengths in capital, innovation, natural resources, education and professional expertise with opportunities being created in Saudi Arabia.

He said the presence of investors, companies, entrepreneurs and government representatives from both countries created the right mix to move from talks to execution.

The next phase of Saudi-Canadian investment ties should be more specific, more ambitious and more commercially focused, he said. It should link Canadian capital, technology and entrepreneurship with opportunities in the Kingdom, while opening new channels for Saudi capital, companies and national institutions in Canada.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks during a media availability in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, Thursday, July 9, 2026. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press via AP)

Natural partners

Mining emerged as a central pillar of the talks.

Carney said the mineral wealth sector offered a major base for cooperation and recalled his earlier participation in the Future Minerals Forum in Saudi Arabia. He said the Kingdom had become one of the most important suppliers and active players in global mining, backed by major financial investment in the sector.

He called for faster integration of Canadian experts, capital and advanced geological expertise with Saudi opportunities, and for steering the partnership toward mutual education and training. The goal, he said, was to turn geological science and modern technology into sustainable jobs for workers in Saudi Arabia’s mining sector.

Carney said Canadian educational institutions, including Niagara College, were ready to help train the Saudi national workforce and develop its digital and technical skills to use artificial intelligence tools.

He said about 40% of major mining companies worldwide were linked through close partnerships at several levels, strengthening prospects for joint work, operational development and the exploration of opportunities and calculated risks.

Carney said Canada and Saudi Arabia were natural partners in minerals and mining, adding that their cooperation would help meet growing global market needs.

Human dimension

David Morrison, Senior Diplomatic and International Affairs Advisor to the Prime Minister, said trade and investment ties between Ottawa and Riyadh were at their strongest point in history.

Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat on the sidelines of the forum, Morrison said mining and minerals were a strategic pillar in Carney’s Jeddah talks because of the fit between Canada’s long experience in the sector and the opportunities offered by Vision 2030.

He said the strong Canadian business presence at the forum and Carney’s visit reflected a full commitment to supporting Vision 2030 targets.

The next phase would bring major partnerships and high-value deals focused on modern technologies, led by artificial intelligence, the digital economy, infrastructure and mining, he added.

Morrison also stressed the human dimension of the partnership, saying Canadian institutions and colleges, including Niagara College, were helping train young Saudis for the jobs of the future.

Success in healthcare, aviation and mining was now closely tied to the ability to lead the use of artificial intelligence tools, an area Canada is working to develop with Saudi Arabia, he remarked.

Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, welcomes Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney in Jeddah on Thursday. (SPA)

Agreements

Mohammed Al-Dulaim, chairman of the Saudi-Canadian Business Council, said that about 15 agreements to be signed on the sidelines of the event in the presence of the Canadian prime minister would be worth more than $1 billion.

He told Asharq Al-Awsat that the agreements would expand trade between the two sides, which has exceeded 66 billion over the past five years, and said the visit would mark a new stage in bilateral relations.

Al-Dulaim said Canada has expertise and technical capabilities in technology, mining, health, insurance, infrastructure, and artificial intelligence, while Saudi Arabia has a dynamic economy and a Vision 2030 agenda that makes Riyadh an investment destination.

The Kingdom and Canada are also positioned to build an integrated value chain for critical minerals. Saudi Arabia’s mineral resources are estimated at about $2.5 trillion and include more than 50 minerals across more than 2.1 million square kilometers.

Exploration opportunities and downstream value chains are expanding rapidly in areas that align with Canadian mining expertise.

Saudi Arabia is offering Canadian partners investment opportunities in artificial intelligence, data centers, financial services and mining, while highlighting progress in developing its investment environment.

The stock of Canadian direct investment in financial and insurance activities reached 177 million riyals, or $47.2 million, in 2024.

Saudi Arabia also offers access to the largest economy in the Middle East and a Gulf market worth about $2.3 trillion. Since last February, foreign investors have had full direct access to the Saudi main market, where market capitalization reached 8.82 trillion riyals, or $2.35 trillion.


Türkiye, Iraq to Sign 12-month Extension of Oil Pipeline Deal

Türkiye's Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar speaks as he meets with reporters at Antalya Diplomacy Forum in Antalya, Türkiye, April 18, 2026. REUTERS/Umit Bektas
Türkiye's Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar speaks as he meets with reporters at Antalya Diplomacy Forum in Antalya, Türkiye, April 18, 2026. REUTERS/Umit Bektas
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Türkiye, Iraq to Sign 12-month Extension of Oil Pipeline Deal

Türkiye's Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar speaks as he meets with reporters at Antalya Diplomacy Forum in Antalya, Türkiye, April 18, 2026. REUTERS/Umit Bektas
Türkiye's Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar speaks as he meets with reporters at Antalya Diplomacy Forum in Antalya, Türkiye, April 18, 2026. REUTERS/Umit Bektas

Türkiye and Iraq are set to sign, within days, a one-year agreement to keep open the crude oil pipeline between the two countries, Turkish Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar said on Thursday. Their decades-old pipeline agreement, which governs exports through the pipeline, is due to expire on July 27.

"We have brought the agreement that will cover the next 12 months to the final stage. We aim to sign it in the coming days," Bayraktar, who was in Baghdad for an official visit, said in a statement, adding that oil flow from Iraq to Türkiye's port of Ceyhan on the eastern Mediterranean coast will continue.

The pipeline had remained offline for 2-1/2 years after an arbitration court ruled for Ankara to pay $1.5 billion in damages for unauthorized Iraqi exports Türkiye received between 2014 and 2018.

Flows resumed late last year. In an earlier post on X, Bayraktar said he had a fruitful meeting with Iraq Oil Minister Basim Mohammed, during which they discussed oil and gas cooperation. Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi also met with Bayraktar during his visit, according to his office.


Egypt June Annual Core Inflation Rises to 14.3%

The sun behind high-voltage power lines and electricity pylons along the River Nile during a heatwave in Al-Qanatir al-Khairia, on the outskirts of Cairo, Egypt, July 4, 2026. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh
The sun behind high-voltage power lines and electricity pylons along the River Nile during a heatwave in Al-Qanatir al-Khairia, on the outskirts of Cairo, Egypt, July 4, 2026. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh
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Egypt June Annual Core Inflation Rises to 14.3%

The sun behind high-voltage power lines and electricity pylons along the River Nile during a heatwave in Al-Qanatir al-Khairia, on the outskirts of Cairo, Egypt, July 4, 2026. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh
The sun behind high-voltage power lines and electricity pylons along the River Nile during a heatwave in Al-Qanatir al-Khairia, on the outskirts of Cairo, Egypt, July 4, 2026. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh

Egypt's annual urban consumer inflation slowed slightly to 14.3% in June from 14.6% in May, statistics agency CAPMAS said on Thursday.

Annual core inflation, calculated by the Central Bank of Egypt, rose to 14.3% in June from 13.8% in May, Reuters reported.

The monthly decline compared with a drop of 0.1% in June 2025 and a rise of 1.6% in May 2026, according to CAPMAS.

Core inflation on a monthly basis rose 0.3% in June, compared with a fall of 0.2% in June 2025 and a rise of 1.6% in May 2026.