Total Value of Awarded Contracts in Saudi Arabia Reaches $12 Billion in Q1

Buildings are seen in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (File Photo: Reuters)
Buildings are seen in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (File Photo: Reuters)
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Total Value of Awarded Contracts in Saudi Arabia Reaches $12 Billion in Q1

Buildings are seen in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (File Photo: Reuters)
Buildings are seen in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (File Photo: Reuters)

The total value of awarded contracts across Saudi Arabia for Q1 in 2020 reached $12 billion, with a 28 percent quarter-on-quarter growth despite the repercussions of the coronavirus pandemic, according to a report by the US Saudi Business Council (USSBC).

The awarded contracts included numerous mega-projects across several sectors, with the military sector gaining $4 billion deals followed by oil and gas with $3 billion and petrochemicals ($2.2 billion).

These three sectors accounted for 76 percent of all awarded contracts alone, while the other contributing sectors included water, power, and real estate.

According to the report, it seems that Saudi Aramco is ready to continue awarding giant contracts in the oil and gas sector despite the impact of the COVID-19 on the economy.

Aramco goes ahead with its efforts to expand the Kingdom's capabilities in extracting hydrocarbons to meet local and global demand.

The experts also noted that the government capital spending during the first quarter of 2020 is a strong indicator of the strength of the construction sector.

When compared to the same period in 2019, the value of the contracts is down by 8 percent.

USSBC Member al-Baraa al-Wazir told Asharq Al-Awsat that the Kingdom began easing the measures imposed during the lockdown and opened shopping centers and resumed domestic flights as of the end of May.

Wazir indicated that these measures will lead to the gradual recovery of the economy, expecting Aramco to award a number of contracts in al-Ghawar southern field during the second quarter.

He also predicted that the Saudi National Water Company will award a major project contract in the industrial city of Jubail.



World Bank to Finance Syria with $146 Million to Restore Electricity

Syrians walk in a dark street in Douma. Reuters file photo
Syrians walk in a dark street in Douma. Reuters file photo
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World Bank to Finance Syria with $146 Million to Restore Electricity

Syrians walk in a dark street in Douma. Reuters file photo
Syrians walk in a dark street in Douma. Reuters file photo

The World Bank approved a $146 million grant to help Syria restore reliable, affordable electricity and support the country's economic recovery, it said in a statement on Wednesday.

“The Syria Electricity Emergency Project (SEEP) will rehabilitate damaged transmission lines and transformer substations and provide technical assistance to support the development of the electricity sector and build the capacity of its institutions,” it said.

After 14 years of war, Syria's electricity sector has been suffering from severe damage to its grid and power stations, aging infrastructure, and persistent fuel shortages.

"Among Syria’s urgent reconstruction needs, rehabilitating the electricity sector has emerged as a critical, no-regret investment that can improve the living conditions of the Syrian people, support the return of refugees and the internally displaced, enable resumption of other services such as water services and healthcare for the population and help kickstart economic recovery," said World Bank Middle East Division Director Jean-Christophe Carret.

"This project represents the first step in a planned increase in World Bank support to Syria on its path to recovery and development,” he added.

According to the World Bank statement, the SEEP will finance the rehabilitation of high voltage transmission lines, including two critical 400 kV high-voltage interconnector transmission lines damaged during the conflict, restoring Syria’s regional connectivity to Jordan and Türkiye.

The project will also repair damaged high-voltage transformer substations near demand centers in the most impacted areas that host the highest number of returnee refugees and internally displaced people and provide necessary spare parts and maintenance equipment.

In addition, the SEEP will provide technical assistance to inform the country’s key electricity sector strategies, policy and regulatory reforms, and investment plans for medium to long term sustainability. It will also provide capacity building support to the electricity sector institutions to implement these strategies and reforms.