Khaleej Times

Forget oil; Saudi Arabia turns to sand

- Sarah Algethami

riyadh — After relying on oil to fuel its economy for more than half-a-century, Saudi Arabia is turning to its other abundant natural resource to take it beyond the oil age — the desert.

The kingdom is converting thousands of square kilometres of sand into new cities as it seeks to diversify away from crude, create jobs and boost investment.

In the past month alone, the world’s biggest oil exporter has announced two major developmen­ts — one covering an area bigger than Belgium and another almost the size of Moscow. That’s on top of plans to build a series of so-called economic cities — special zones in logistics, tourism, industry and finance, an entertainm­ent city and a $10 billion financial district.

“The overall progress with the economic cities has been very slow, even before the collapse of the oil price,” said Monica Malik, chief economist at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank. “Since then, the pace of developmen­t has moderated even further with a number of projects being placed on hold.”

When “Saudi Vision 2030” was announced last April, the 84-page blueprint said the government would work to “salvage” and “revamp” economic city projects executed over the past decade that “did not realise their potential.”

The kingdom last week announced plans to turn 50 islands and 34,000sqkm — an area bigger than Belgium — along its Red Sea coastline into a global tourism destinatio­n. —

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