Saudi seeks to attract SAR1.6 trillion with industrial development programme
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Saudi seeks to attract SAR1.6 trillion with industrial development programme

Saudi seeks to attract SAR1.6 trillion with industrial development programme

The programme will cover project in industry, mining, energy, logistics, military, chemicals and small businesses industries

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Saudi Arabia aims to attract private sector investments worth SAR1.6 trillion ($427bn) over the next decade through an industrial development programme aimed at diversifying the economy, Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said on Saturday.

Investments will be made through the National Industrial Development and Logistics Program (NIDLP), one of the programmes set out under Vision 2030, a wider reform strategy led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and intended to wean the economy off hydrocarbons and create jobs for Saudis.

Falih said the kingdom would on Monday announce projects worth SAR70bn that are “ready for negotiations” under the NIDLP to boost industry, mining, energy and logistics.

At a later stage, it plans to announce projects in the military, chemicals and small businesses industries worth $50bn, he added without giving a timeframe.

“The (NIDLP) programme targets 1.6 trillion Saudi riyals … it is quite ambitious but it is over a 10-year period so we have got the time to do it,” Falih told a press conference.

The programme will seek to raise money from both domestic and foreign investors.

“We will have a huge contribution from the private sector outside the kingdom, but we will leave the bigger share for the Saudi private sector,” Falih said.

The programme will integrate the mining, industry and energy sectors, which Falih said were each vital to the kingdom’s plan to empower the private sector and make it the main driver for economic growth.

After decades of spending on development projects, the government has made attracting greater foreign investment a cornerstone of its Vision 2030 plan.

Transport Minister Nabeel al-Amudi told the press conference that NIDLP would launch 60 initiatives in the logistics sector, including five new airports and 2,000 km of railways, and aims to attract more than SAR135bn of investments.

“We aim by 2020 that the logistics sector contributes 221 billion riyals to GDP,” he said.

Under Vision 2030 the kingdom aims to have the private sector operate much of its transport infrastructure, including airports and sea ports, with the government keeping a role as regulator.


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