The National - News

ENERGY France’s Veolia to mobilise $200m in investment­s with expansion planned

- JENNIFER GNANA

French utilities developer Veolia is looking to mobilise about US$200 million worth of investment­s in power and water projects in the Mena region in 2018, with an acquisitio­n in Turkey and partnershi­ps in the multi-billion dollar Saudi utilities market on its agenda for the coming year.

The Middle East currently accounts for two per cent of Veolia’s annual revenue, according to Xavier Joseph, chief executive Middle East for Veolia. The company hopes to grow this figure significan­tly via participat­ion in desalinati­on and water projects in Abu Dhabi and Saudi Arabia.

“We invest through PPPs [pubic private partnershi­ps] and with the help of debt, $200m is the global amount of money we can mobilise through project financing,” Mr Joseph said in Abu Dhabi.

“We have entered Egypt already and we’re submitting an offer for acquisitio­n in Turkey.

The Turkish acquisitio­n, related to waste-to-energy, will “dramatical­ly change” Veolia’s footprint in the country, said Mr Joseph.

Veolia’s current Turkish operations, which include a waste water treatment plant at Alanya on Turkey’s central Mediterran­ean coast, generates €8 million to €9m (Dh36m to Dh40m) in annual revenue.

In Egypt, the company provides facilities management to Majid Al Futtaim’s Mall of Egypt and Mall of Alexandria via Enova, a Veolia-MAF joint venture.

Veolia plans to bid for the world’s largest desalinati­on facility in Abu Dhabi, a 200 million gallon a day project announced earlier this month by the Abu Dhabi Water & Electricit­y Authority.

The Dh2 billion Taweela project will developed as two desalinati­on plants of 100 million gallons each and will be constructe­d at the namesake power station, which is located north of the city of Abu Dhabi.

Mr Joseph said Veolia plans to submit an expression of interest on the project by the end of this month, and hoped to pre-qualify for the scheme in February.

Firms may be called to submit their bids by October, with hopes for an award by the end of the year, added Mr Joseph, observing that the firm is likely to go alone for the scheme.

“The public client Adwea keeps 60 per cent of the project so the private industries are interested only in the 40 per cent of the project company, so either we will go alone or we will go with one other partner because there is not enough equity to share somehow,” he said.

Veolia is also targeting participat­ion in $2.5bn worth of desalinati­on projects in Saudi Arabia across the industrial cities of Shuqaiq, Yanbu as well as Jubail, with further opportunit­es via the privatisat­ion of the kingdom’s water sector and participat­ion the country’s water distributi­on business.

The privatisat­ion of Saudi Arabia’s water distributi­on sector could generate $4billion to $5bn worth of annual operating revenues for private sector participan­ts, said Mr Joseph.

“We have partnershi­ps with Saudi entities and we are looking forward to seeing the distributi­on privatisat­ion which is supposed to be the next step after the waste water treatment plant,” he added.

Veolia, along with Acwa Power and Oman’s Dhofar Internatio­nal Developmen­t, won a contract in December to develop a 25 million gallon desalinati­on project in Oman, using reverse osmosis technology.

 ??  ?? Veolia manages facilities for Majid Al Futtaim’s Mall of Egypt in Cairo MAF
Veolia manages facilities for Majid Al Futtaim’s Mall of Egypt in Cairo MAF

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