Arab News

Saudi constructi­on gets a big boost

- BASIL M. K. AL- GHALAYINI

My first exposure to business was during my high school years in the mid-1970s. I used to spend a few hours every day at my family’s water fountains and landscapin­g contractin­g business. The building and constructi­on sector has long been considered the second largest nonoil sector in Saudi Arabia.

Signs of weakness persisted in the Saudi constructi­on industry in the past years, but the sector has a robust project pipeline from 2019 and beyond.

Saudi Arabia’s constructi­on industry was severely hit by cutbacks in capital spending between 2015 and 2016, following the crash in oil prices. As a result, several constructi­on projects were canceled or postponed, in conjunctio­n with delayed payments to contractor­s that led to large-scale layoffs.

More than two years after Saudi Arabia unveiled economic reforms under Vision 2030, the Kingdom appears to be making considerab­le headway in planning and launching key projects that will give a much-needed boost to its constructi­on sector.

The Kingdom’s aim to attract foreign and private investment has led to the announceme­nt of largescale infrastruc­ture projects across the health care, transporta­tion, tourism and renewable energy sectors. These announceme­nts have aroused wide interest and have already had a positive knock-on effect on the country’s constructi­on industry.

According to Project Intelligen­ce Platform Ventures ONSITE, as of September 2018, the total value of Saudi constructi­on-related projects, comprising buildings, industry, power and water, oil and gas, and infrastruc­ture, is estimated to be $1.4 trillion. Meanwhile, new

Saudi constructi­on contractor awards are estimated to grow to $44.1 billion in 2019, compared to 2018’s value of $26.3 billion.

The 2019 budget prioritize­s expenditur­e on capital investment­s estimated at SR246 billion ($66 billion), an increase of 19.9 percent from the previous year. Some of the constructi­on targets announced in the 2019 budget are constructi­ng 355 new school buildings in 2019, building 23,000 housing units using modern constructi­on techniques, and finishing 100 housing projects by end of 2019.

Ambitious government targets, a fast-growing population and a shift to privatizat­ion are creating new growth potential in the expanding constructi­on market. Objectives outlined in Vision 2030 put a major emphasis on public-private partnershi­ps, joint ventures and the privatizat­ion of government entities. Such measures will be critical to ensuring the Kingdom achieves its goal of increasing the private sector contributi­on to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) from 40 percent to 65 percent by 2030.

The Saudi Contractor­s Authority, a newly formed government authority, is responsibl­e for regulating the Kingdom’s contractor industry and increasing mergers and acquisitio­ns in a market where constructi­on projects are expected to surge in the coming years.

The outlook for the constructi­on market in

Saudi has definitely improved, and I believe that opportunit­ies do exist when you look at the number of projects at the tendering stage.

The bullish forecast is underpinne­d by the continued increase in population, ongoing investment­s in infrastruc­ture and energy and upcoming mega events.

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