Saudi Arabia to Produce 100 Mln Tons of Waste by 2035

Investment opportunities to be offered by the Saudi waste management sector over coming years. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Investment opportunities to be offered by the Saudi waste management sector over coming years. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Saudi Arabia to Produce 100 Mln Tons of Waste by 2035

Investment opportunities to be offered by the Saudi waste management sector over coming years. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Investment opportunities to be offered by the Saudi waste management sector over coming years. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

A Saudi research paper has predicted that around 106 million tons of waste will be produced by the Kingdom by 2035. A labor force of 77,000 workers and around 1,329 facilities and landfills are needed to manage the waste.

The findings of the study were reviewed by CEO of the Saudi Waste Management Center Dr. Abdullah Al Sebaei during a meeting organized by Asharqia Chamber on Monday.

Sebaei noted that the waste management sector in Saudi Arabia continues to offer attractive investment opportunities.

The greatest challenge facing it is found in the production and storage branches of the sector, he added.

More so, the study goes over the six main stages of developing the Kingdom’s waste management sector.

According to researchers, the current stage involves analysis on multiple levels, followed by drafting a regulatory system and attracting investors.

“There is a lack of control and supervision in the various stages of the value chain, a lack of general environmental awareness at the level of individuals and waste producers, and a lack in human qualifications and experiences in the workforce in the sector,” said Sebaei, stressing that the recycling sector is unorganized.

Furthermore, he remarked that the participation of the private sector remains limited.

Farah al-Gharib, a member of Asharqia Chamber’s environmental committee, told Asharq Al-Awsat that real awareness must be raised among investors around the material and developmental benefits of investing in the waste management sector.

Saudi Arabia has carried out a number of structural economic reforms and launched a group of emerging sectors that included waste management which aims at achieving integrated economic and environmental sustainability.

The waste management sector is being developed through increasing its efficiency, establishing comprehensive projects for recycling and reducing all types of pollution.



Saudi Arabia Eyes Asian Investments via Shenzhen, Shanghai

Group photo of the listing (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Group photo of the listing (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Saudi Arabia Eyes Asian Investments via Shenzhen, Shanghai

Group photo of the listing (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Group photo of the listing (Asharq Al-Awsat)

The Saudi financial market has undergone a significant transformation since the launch of Saudi Vision 2030.
The initiatives, programs, and regulatory reforms associated with Vision 2030 have encouraged international investors, index providers, and financial institutions to join the Saudi market.
The Public Investment Fund (PIF) has worked to achieve the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030 by implementing mechanisms that enhance the pace of attracting foreign investments to the Kingdom.
This includes stimulating international investors, particularly Asian investors, to invest in the Saudi financial market. One notable development is the listing of the first batch of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in the Saudi market, such as the Saudi China Southern CSOP Fund and the Saudi Huatai-PineBridge CSOP Fund on the Shenzhen and Shanghai stock exchanges in China.
During the announcement of the listing on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, PIF Governor Al-Rumayyan Yasir stressed that these listings are an important step toward enhancing communication among the financial markets of Saudi Arabia and China.
They will provide Asian investors with the opportunity to access the Saudi financial market and observe its sustainable growth driven by the Kingdom's economic transformation.
These two new funds are part of the first batch of ETFs in China capable of investing in the Saudi financial market.
They rely on the model known as listed ETFs, which allow investors to track the FTSE Saudi Arabia Index and invest in the largest market in the Middle East.
This enables investors to gain greater access to one of the fastest-growing and most strategic markets in the world and observe the performance of 56 leading large and medium-cap companies listed on the Saudi stock exchange (Tadawul).
The new listing comes as part of the efforts initiated by the PIF to enhance investment flows into the Saudi Arabian capital market.
During the announcement of the listing process on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, Al-Rumayyan emphasized that the listing operations are an important step toward enhancing communication between the financial markets in Saudi Arabia and China.
He added that these operations will provide Asian investors with the opportunity to access the Saudi Arabian capital market and observe its sustainable growth driven by the economic transformation in the Kingdom.