Riyadh Hosts Future Investment Initiative

The Kingdom Tower stands in the night above the Saudi capital Riyadh. (Reuters)
The Kingdom Tower stands in the night above the Saudi capital Riyadh. (Reuters)
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Riyadh Hosts Future Investment Initiative

The Kingdom Tower stands in the night above the Saudi capital Riyadh. (Reuters)
The Kingdom Tower stands in the night above the Saudi capital Riyadh. (Reuters)

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Deputy Premier and Minister of Defense, will inaugurate the Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh on Tuesday.

With the participation of over 2,500 delegates and leading business figures from more than 60 countries, the conference will debate the opportunities and challenges that will shape the world economy and investment environment over the coming decades.

The first day of the event will begin with CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin leading a panel of financial experts in debating the new social, economic and intellectual frameworks needed to drive progress.

In particular, the session will discuss the emerging trends which will likely have the greatest impact and how public and private sector leaders can use these to succeed.

Speakers on the panel include Amin Nasser, president of Saudi Aramco, Larry Fink, chairman of BlackRock, Yasir Al-Rumayyan, managing director of the Public Investment Fund, and Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund.

Another key session will examine breakthroughs in artificial intelligence, robotics, virtual reality, big data, social media, medical science, and smart infrastructure that are now converging to reinvent cities for the 21st century.

The session will be chaired by Maria Bartiromo, global markets editor for Fox Business, with the participation of high-profile attendees, including Masayoshi Son, chairman of Softbank Group.

The first day will conclude with energy executives congregating at the “Summit on Energy for a Sustainable Planet” to discuss which technologies and innovations will shape the sector over the next ten years.

Taking place in the context of volatile oil prices and significant advances in energy and environmental technologies, the summit will also examine the challenges of diversification through investment in renewable resources.

Other sessions will explore topics such as the “Future of the Information Economy”, “Leadership and Partnership for the Age of Uncertainty” and “What Policies Can Drive Growth”.

The daily plenary sessions, created in collaboration with the event’s official Knowledge Partners – BCG, EY, McKinsey and Oliver Wyman – will seek to stimulate expert-led debate on how societies and businesses can achieve sustainable, long-term financial returns while having a positive and lasting impact.

Pedro Oliveira, Oliver Wyman managing partner in the MEA region, said: “We see the Future Investment Initiative as a unique opportunity for the global community to bring together, in Saudi Arabia, aspirational thinking around the future of the world economy with the realities of investment.”

Powered by PIF, the Future Investment Initiative will take place in Riyadh from October 24 to 26.

The invitation-only event is being organized in the context of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, a blueprint that is already charting the path for the Kingdom to harness its strategic location and strong investment capabilities.



Saudi Arabia, Mauritania Partnership Aims to Produce 14 Mln Tons of Iron Annually

Mauritania’s Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Moktar Ould Dahi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Mauritania’s Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Moktar Ould Dahi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Saudi Arabia, Mauritania Partnership Aims to Produce 14 Mln Tons of Iron Annually

Mauritania’s Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Moktar Ould Dahi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Mauritania’s Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Moktar Ould Dahi. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Mauritania and Saudi Arabia are working to launch a strategic iron mining partnership as part of efforts to expand economic cooperation and boost mutual investments, Mauritania’s ambassador to Riyadh said.

Ambassador Moktar Ould Dahi told Asharq Al-Awsat that the project involves creating “Takamul,” a joint venture between Mauritania’s state-owned mining firm and Saudi Arabia’s Hadeed.

The company, now in the funding stage, would develop an iron ore mine in Mauritania with an annual output target of 12-14 million tons.

The initiative follows a June meeting in Makkah between Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister, and Mauritanian President Mohamed Ould Cheikh El Ghazouani.

Ould Dahi said trade between the two nations is set to gain momentum, with plans to improve direct transport links to overcome logistical challenges caused by distance and the lack of a direct shipping route.

Saudi investment in Mauritania has risen in recent years, particularly in small and medium-sized enterprises in agriculture and manufacturing. A joint Saudi-Mauritanian business council has been formed to spur private sector partnerships, he added.

Saudi Arabia and Islamic development institutions are major financiers of Mauritanian projects, the envoy said. The Saudi Fund for Development currently has $340 million in active financing, including the King Salman Hospital in Nouakchott and a water supply project for Kiffa.

The Islamic Development Bank has $315 million allocated for projects such as the Atar-Chinguetti road and a specialist maternity and children’s hospital.

Mauritania offers “attractive reserves” in multiple sectors, Ould Dahi said, listing high-grade deposits of iron ore, gold, copper, uranium, phosphates and cobalt; significant confirmed gas reserves with more expected; rich fisheries; strong green hydrogen potential; and hundreds of thousands of hectares of fertile, undeveloped farmland along the Senegal River.

He expects these opportunities to translate into new Saudi-Mauritanian ventures soon, noting growing interest from Saudi public and private investors.

“Mauritania-Saudi relations are at their best,” Ould Dahi said, citing regular high-level consultations, a formal joint cooperation committee and strong Saudi backing for Mauritania in Arab, Islamic and international development forums.

He credited Saudi Arabia for decades of support since Mauritania’s independence, funding key infrastructure from roads, water systems and dams to power, schools and hospitals.