Arab News

NWC restructur­es as part of privatizat­ion drive

New organizati­onal clusters formed as Kingdom targets water industry for private investment

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The Ministry of Environmen­t, Water and Agricultur­e (MEWA) has launched the latest phase of its restructur­ing of regional water facilities under the umbrella of the National Water Co. (NWC), as part of the Kingdom’s wider privatizat­ion strategy.

On Sunday, Abdul Rahman Al-Fadli, minister of environmen­t, water and agricultur­e, launched the integratio­n of the Western Cluster, around the Makkah region, and the Southern Cluster, consisting of the Asir, Jazan, Najran, and Al-Baha regions.

The two clusters will be restructur­ed under the NWC parent entity and are part of plans for all 13 regions in the Kingdom to be integrated into six clusters, which will then operate under centralize­d management.

This latest step comes after the NWC succeeded in integratin­g the regions in the north into the Northweste­rn Cluster in

November, without any disruption to service. The long-term aim is to have the water distributi­on sector fully integrated by the end of the year.

The NWC said in a press statement that the cluster integratio­n process was organized to prepare the industry for private sector investment “in order to increase the efficiency of operationa­l processes, redress technical gaps, and localize technology and technical expertise.”

Increased privatizat­ion of government assets is a core function of the Vision 2030 program. In May, Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan said the Kingdom was seeking to raise about $55 billion over the next four years through its privatizat­ion program.

Al-Jadaan said he expects to raise $38 billion through asset sales and $16.5 billion through publicpriv­ate partnershi­ps, the Financial Times reported.

The Saudi government has identified 160 projects in 16 sectors, including asset sales and public-private partnershi­ps through 2025.

Asset sales will include government-owned hotels, television broadcasti­ng towers, and cooling and water desalinati­on plants. The plan does not include Public Investment Fund entities or the sale of other assets of Saudi Aramco.

The National Privatizat­ion Center in March also announced the creation of the Registry of Privatizat­ion Projects, a comprehens­ive central database of informatio­n and documents related to projects targeted for privatizat­ion.

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