Saudi Arabia announced on Tuesday a US$500 billion (£379.6 billion) plan to build a business and industrial zone that links with Jordan and Egypt, the biggest effort yet to free the kingdom from dependence on oil exports.
The 26,500 square km (10,230 square mile) zone, known as NEOM, will focus on industries including energy and water, biotechnology, food, advanced manufacturing and entertainment, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said.
The announcement came as an international business conference got under way in Riyadh, drawing over 3,500 people from 88 countries.
Arranged by Saudi Arabia's main sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund (PIF), the conference is labelled the Future Investment Initiative - an effort to present the world's top oil exporter as a leading global investment destination.
Saudi Arabia's economy, though rich, has struggled to overcome low oil prices. Prince Mohammed has launched a series of economic and social reforms -- such as allowing women to drive -- to modernise the kingdom.
Officials hope a privatisation programme, including the sale of 5 percent of oil giant Saudi Aramco, will raise US$300 billion. Riyadh is cutting red tape and removing barriers to investment; on Sunday, it said it would let strategic foreign investors own more than 10 percent of listed Saudi companies.
NEOM could be a major focus of new investment. The Saudi government, the PIF and local and international investors are expected to put more than half a trillion dollars into it in coming years, Prince Mohammed said.
Adjacent to the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba and near maritime trade routes that use the Suez Canal, the zone will serve as a gateway to the proposed King Salman Bridge, which will link Egypt and Saudi Arabia, the PIF said.
"NEOM is situated on one of the world’s most prominent economic arteries ... Its strategic location will also facilitate the zone’s rapid emergence as a global hub that connects Asia, Europe and Africa."
There was no immediate comment on the plan from Jordan and Egypt, which are close allies of Saudi Arabia. Riyadh said it was already in contact with potential investors and would complete the project's first phase by 2025.
Prince Mohammed appointed Klaus Kleinfeld, a former chief executive of Siemens AG and Alcoa Inc, to run the NEOM project.
HUGE RESOURCES
Saudi Arabia will need huge financial and technical resources to build NEOM on the scale it envisages. Past experience suggests this may be difficult.
Bureaucracy has slowed many Saudi development plans, and private investors are cautious about getting involved in state projects, partly because of an uncertain legal environment.
The zone, which will have its own tax and labour laws and an autonomous judicial system, is to power itself solely with wind power and solar energy, PIF said - a goal which may be hard to achieve in practise.
But the project underlines Prince Mohammed's ambition to rescue the economy from severe damage caused by low oil prices. NEOM will reduce the volume of money leaking out of Saudi Arabia by expanding limited local investment options, the PIF said.
A key source of future investment funds for the PIF, which now has about $230 billion of assets under management, is the government's planned sale of a roughly 5 percent stake in national oil giant Saudi Aramco, which could raise tens of billions of dollars.
PIF managing director Yasir al-Rumayyan told the conference that Saudi Arabia was still on track to conduct an initial public offer of Aramco shares in 2018, but did not say on which stock markets the company would be listed.
Aramco CEO Amin Nasser told reporters that in addition to Riyadh, possible foreign listings in markets such as New York, London, Tokyo and Hong Kong had been looked at, and a decision still had to be made.
Reuters
Tue Oct 24 2017
Mohammed bin Salman and Klaus Kleinfeld sign documents after Kleinfeld was appointed as NEOM's Chief Executive Officer, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia October 24, 2017. - REUTERS
Lebih 81 peratus syarikat senaraian awam di Bursa Malaysia patuh syariah - Pengerusi
Sebanyak 820 syarikat atau 81.3 peratus daripada keseluruhan 1,009 syarikat senaraian awam (PLC) di Bursa Malaysia patuh Syariah setakat 27 Mei, 2024, kata Pengerusi Tan Sri Abdul Wahid Omar.
Capital A catat kerugian bersih RM91.55 juta pada suku pertama 2024
Capital A Bhd mencatatkan kerugian bersih sebanyak RM91.55 juta pada suku pertama berakhir 31 Mac 2024 berbanding keuntungan bersih RM57.09 juta padatempoh yang sama tahun lepas.
Pahang berjaya noktahkan kemiskinan tegar - MB
Pahang berjaya menoktahkan kemiskinan tegar semalam selari dengan aspirasi kerajaan sebelum ini, kata Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Wan Rosdy Wan Ismail.
Hampir 20 peratus wilayah Indonesia mula alami musim kemarau
Kira-kira 19 peratus wilayah Indonesia kini mengalami permulaan musim kemarau yang dijangka berterusan sehingga September.
KBS, MSN kaji keperluan rombak geran program pembangunan
Kementerian Belia dan Sukan (KBS) melalui Majlis Sukan Negara (MSN) akan mengkaji semula sekiranya terdapat keperluan merombak peruntukan geran kepada program pembangunan sukan terutamanya apabila mer
Kerajaan rancang enam misi perdagangan antarabangsa tahun ini, galak eksport francais
Kerajaan dengan kerjasama MFA merancang melaksanakan enam misi perdagangan antarabangsa tahun ini dengan objektif untuk memupuk dan menggalakkan lebih banyak eksport francais ke luar negara.
Rangka manusia ditemukan dalam belukar
Siasatan awal kita bagaimanapun tidak mengesyaki sebarang unsur jenayah yang berlaku di sebalik penemuan rangka manusia itu.
Penghantaran bantuan melalui udara ada baik, ada buruk - KHOM
Penghantaran bantuan kemanusiaan melalui udara ada risiko keselamatan kepada orang awam secara umum.
Kerajaan pertingkat Maqasid al-Syariah dalam pengembangan ekonomi - PM Anwar
Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim berkata kerajaan kini memasuki fasa kedua dalam usaha memperluas instrumen kewangan Islam.
Jangan bimbang dengan peraturan baharu - China
China yang mempunyai pertikaian kedaulatan maritim dengan Filipina dan negara lain yang menuntut wilayah, telah mengeluarkan peraturan baru yang berkuat kuasa pada 15 Jun.
Ebit Liew masuk Gaza hari ini, serah dua treler ubat dan keperluan asas kepada rakyat Palestin
Ebit Lew mengakui air matanya tidak dapat dibendung lagi usia mengaminkan doa sejurus bantuan disampaikan.
Konflik di Gaza: Angka korban rakyat Palestin meningkat kepada 30
Serangan udara oleh Israel berterusan manakala Hamas membalas dengan menembak roket ke Tel Aviv.
Bandar hilang berusia 3,000 tahun ditemui di Mesir
Kawasan yang ditemui menerusi satu misi arkeologi itu lengkap dengan tinggalan struktur rumah yang diperbuat daripada tanah liat, serta artifak-artifak bersejarah dan alatan dari zaman firaun.
Berita tempatan pilihan sepanjang hari ini
Antara pelbagai berita dalam negara yang disiarkan di Astro AWANI, berikut adalah yang paling menjadi tumpuan sepanjang hari ini, Ahad, 2 Ogos 2020.
COVID-19: Rayuan kecualikan caj kuarantin pelajar Malaysia dari Yaman - YPC
Muhyiddin dirayu agar segera campur tangan mengatasi masalah caj kuarantin yang difahamkan dikenakan sebanyak RM1,890 ke atas pelajar Malaysia yang baru pulang dari Yaman pada pagi Ahad.
131 rakyat Malaysia terkandas di Yaman tiba di tanah air - Wisma Putra
Kumpulan pertama rakyat Malaysia seramai 131 orang yang dilaporkan terkandas di Yaman sejak Mac lepas susulan pandemik COVID-19, selamat tiba di KLIA pada pagi Ahad.
Pelakon 'Twilight' meninggal dunia
Mendiang Boyce dijumpai bersama mayat teman wanitanya Natalie Adepoju, 27, di Las Vegas, Nevada.
Sampai berdarah hidung mahu jumpa Mo Salah
Dalam kekecohan itu, dia terlanggar tiang lampu lalu rebah terbaring dalam keadaan tidak sedar.
Laungan 'Laillahaillallah, As-Syahid Habibullah' iringi jenazah Dr Fadi
Laungan -Laillahaillallah, as-Syahid Habibullah- berkumandang di Surau Medan Idaman, Setapak, tatkala jenazah Imam Dr Fadi Al-Batsh dibawa masuk ke perkarangan surau itu.
Lebih 1,000 lagi pelajar dibawa pulang sebelum Jumaat
Seramai 1,328 pelajar selamat dihantar pulang menerusi Ops Piramid 2 setakat hari ini.