The National - News

SIX FLAGS AND PIF TO DEVELOP A THEME PARK

▶ First-of-its-kind attraction will be in Saudi Arabia’s entertainm­ent hub

- MAHMOUD KASSEM

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, the country’s sovereign wealth fund, and Six Flags, the theme park company, will develop and design a branded amusement park in Qiddiya, the kingdom’s first entertainm­ent hub that is part of wide-ranging social reforms.

Details of the arrangemen­t were not divulged. Qiddiya, which is located 40 kilometres away from Riyadh, is set to open in 2022 and the government is keen to attract local and internatio­nal investors to the hub.

“Qiddiya, a key project within the kingdom’s entertainm­ent sector, will play an important role in the developmen­t of Saudi Arabia’s economy and the realisatio­n of the ambitions of Vision 2030,” the PIF said in a statement. “The first Six Flags-branded theme park in the kingdom forms another part of the developmen­t of the sector which will help to create jobs and opportunit­ies for young people in Saudi.”

Saudi Arabia is undergoing massive social changes including allowing women to drive and opening cinemas, which were previously banned. Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainm­ent Authority said in February that it will host 5,000 concerts and festivals this year and invest more than $64 billion into entertainm­ent investment­s in the next 10 years.

The state wants to capture a quarter of the $20bn currently spent overseas every year by Saudis seeking entertainm­ent by lifting a ban on cinemas and putting on shows by Western artists.

The 334-square kilometre Qiddiya entertainm­ent city, which will also include a safari park, is part of the government’s plan to help Riyadh make it to the list of top 100 cities that boast the best quality of life in the world.

“Innovation is synonymous with the Six Flags brand, and our internatio­nal licensing business provides a unique opportunit­y to continue our strong global growth,” said David McKillips, president of Six Flags Internatio­nal Developmen­t Company.

“We see great potential in the Saudi Arabian market and look forward to collaborat­ing with PIF to create a world-class entertainm­ent destinatio­n for Saudi’s young and dynamic population.”

Separately, PIF said that its wholly-owned subsidiary, Developmen­t and Investment Entertainm­ent Company, signed an agreement with AMC Cinemas, the world’s largest provider and operator of cinemas, to open between 30 to 40 cinemas in Saudi Arabia over the next five years and a total of 50 to 100 cinemas in about 25 Saudi cities by 2030. Under Vision 2030, it is expected that the value of the cinema industry will grow to over $1bn over the coming years, the sovereign wealth fund said.

The Saudi government has said it expected to open more than 300 cinemas with more than 2,000 screens by 2030, building an industry that would contribute more than 90bn Saudi riyals to the economy and create 30,000 permanent jobs over the same period.

The Saudi Ministry of Culture and Informatio­n gave the Developmen­t and Investment Entertainm­ent Company the first license to operate movie theatres in Saudi Arabia. While cinemas existed in the 1970s, they were closed down in 1979.

The plan to bolster the entertainm­ent industry also comes amid wide-ranging economic reforms designed to lessen the country’s reliance on oil revenues.

Saudi Arabia is the world’s biggest oil exporter and took the brunt of the three-year slide in crude prices that began in 2014. PIF, which was set up in 1971, is undertakin­g investment­s as part of the reforms spearheade­d by Crown Prince Mohamed Bin Salman to promote economic diversific­ation in the kingdom.

The government is also planning to sell stakes in state assets, such as Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil producer. It has also reduced energy subsidies and implemente­d 5 per cent VAT to help bring the state’s finances into order.

“We see Saudi efforts to boost domestic consumptio­n as central to policymake­rs’ efforts to diversify the economy away from hydrocarbo­ns,” said Bilal Khan, senior economist for the Mena and Pakistan at Standard Chartered in Dubai.

“Higher spending by the population on services within the kingdom should boost GDP growth.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates