Saudi Arabia’s MODON Invests $98 Bln in 36 Industrial Cities

Saudi Arabia continues to develop the industrial sector, diversify its activities and adopt the Fourth Industrial Revolution. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Saudi Arabia continues to develop the industrial sector, diversify its activities and adopt the Fourth Industrial Revolution. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Saudi Arabia’s MODON Invests $98 Bln in 36 Industrial Cities

Saudi Arabia continues to develop the industrial sector, diversify its activities and adopt the Fourth Industrial Revolution. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Saudi Arabia continues to develop the industrial sector, diversify its activities and adopt the Fourth Industrial Revolution. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

The Saudi Authority for Industrial Cities and Technology Zones (MODON) announced that it has increased the number of its industrial cities to 36 by the end of 2020 to include more than 4,000 factories, with investments worth $98 billion.

Director of Marketing and Corporate Communications Department, and acting spokesperson of MODON, Qusay al-Abdulkarim, said that MODON aims to support the industrial sector in the Kingdom through its supervision of industrial cities, complexes, private industrial cities and technology zones.

Abdulkarim stressed that the authority’s performance witnessed a historic shift with the launch of the Kingdom’s Vision 2030.

MODON has a qualitative strategy to empower the industry and increase local content by creating an environment suitable for innovative products and services, capable of keeping pace with the aspirations of its partners in the private sector.

The strategy also aims to attract and localize local and global investments with added value to the industrial cities and help boost the role of the non-oil sector.

He pointed out that there are over 6,500 industrial, service, and logistical contracts, and 945 ready-made factories, while the areas of developed industrial lands increased to nearly 200 million square meters.

He announced the cooperation between MODON and the General Authority for Military Industries to localize 50 percent of military spending and support Saudi plans to make military industries an essential economic development sector.

There are over 915 food and beverage factories in MODON’s industrial cities, and about 173 medical factories that contribute to achieving food and medical security in the Kingdom, according to Abdulkarim.

As part of its plans to adopt the Fourth Industrial Revolution and digital transformation in the industrial sector, MODON launched the National Productivity Program in partnership with the National Industrial Development Fund and King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology.

The program helps factories achieve the highest production efficiency rates and adopt the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

Abdulkarim pointed out that the industrial cities host over 517,000 workers, including 185,000 males and 17,000 females, working in various industries and fields, such as food and beverage products, medical supplies, metals, building materials, machinery and equipment, vehicles, and many others.

He indicated that MODON is working to enhance the role of women in industrial development and increase their investments in the sector to 20 percent by 2030.



Iran's Rial Hits a Record Low, Battered by Regional Tensions and Energy Crisis

An Iranian trader counts money in Tehran's Grand Bazaar. (Reuters)
An Iranian trader counts money in Tehran's Grand Bazaar. (Reuters)
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Iran's Rial Hits a Record Low, Battered by Regional Tensions and Energy Crisis

An Iranian trader counts money in Tehran's Grand Bazaar. (Reuters)
An Iranian trader counts money in Tehran's Grand Bazaar. (Reuters)

The Iranian rial on Wednesday fell to its lowest level in history, losing more than 10% of value since Donald Trump won the US presidential election in November and signaling new challenges for Tehran as it remains locked in the wars raging in the Middle East.

The rial traded at 777,000 rials to the dollar, traders in Tehran said, down from 703,000 rials on the day Trump won.

Iran’s Central Bank has in the past flooded the market with more hard currencies in an attempt to improve the rate.

In an interview with state television Tuesday night, Central Bank Gov. Mohammad Reza Farzin said that the supply of foreign currency would increase and the exchange rate would be stabilized. He said that $220 million had been injected into the currency market, The AP reported.

The currency plunged as Iran ordered the closure of schools, universities, and government offices on Wednesday due to a worsening energy crisis exacerbated by harsh winter conditions. The crisis follows a summer of blackouts and is now compounded by severe cold, snow and air pollution.

Despite Iran’s vast natural gas and oil reserves, years of underinvestment and sanctions have left the energy sector ill-prepared for seasonal surges, leading to rolling blackouts and gas shortages.

In 2015, during Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers, the rial was at 32,000 to $1. On July 30, the day that Iran’s reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian was sworn in and began his term, the rate was 584,000 to $1.

Trump unilaterally withdrew America from the accord in 2018, sparking years of tensions between the countries that persist today.

Iran’s economy has struggled for years under crippling international sanctions over its rapidly advancing nuclear program, which now enriches uranium at near weapons-grade levels.

Pezeshkian, elected after a helicopter crash killed hard-line President Ebrahim Raisi in May, came to power on a promise to reach a deal to ease Western sanctions.

Tensions still remain high between the nations, 45 years after the 1979 US Embassy takeover and the 444-day hostage crisis that followed. Before the revolution, the rial traded at 70 for $1.