Taqa consortium wins $408 million Makkah water reservoir project
A consortium made up of the Abu Dhabi National Energy Company, better known as Taqa, Vision Invest and the Gulf Investment Corporation (GIC) has won a bid to develop a Dh1.5 billion ($408 million) water reservoir project in Saudi Arabia’s Makkah region.
The companies will be responsible for building, owning and operating the Juranah Independent Strategic Water Reservoir Project (ISWR-1) for 30 years before transferring the ownership to the Saudi Water Partnership Company (SWPC), Taqa said yesterday.
The project will respond to emergency municipal water demand for all the kingdom’s regions, while also handling peak demand in Makkah and Madinah during the Hajj season.
Taqa will be the lead member for the operations and maintenance activities through a standalone company, which will be co-owned by Vision Invest.
The Abu Dhabi-based utility operator will take a 35 per cent share in the project company and a 50 per cent stake in the operations and maintenance entity, it said.
Debt funding is expected to account for about 80 per cent of the total project cost.
“The project is the first of its kind in Saudi Arabia with the participation of the private sector,” said Khalid Al Qureshi, chief executive of SWPC.
It is expected to contribute to reduced levels of electricity consumption, as the project includes solar energy units, Mr Al Qureshi said.
Saudi Arabia, the Arab world’s largest economy, has allocated more than $80 billion for hundreds of projects to achieve the objectives of the National Water Strategy 2030.
The water reservoir project aligns with Taqa’s commitment to “sustainable development and innovation”, its group chief executive and managing director Jasim Thabet said.
In November, the company revised its growth targets to boost the size of its assets base as it committed Dh75 billion in infrastructure investments.
Taqa is aiming for 150 gigawatts of gross power generation by 2030.
“Winning the Juranah ISWR-1 project reinforces GIC’s role in supporting private sector participation in the development of the GCC economies,” said Meshary Al Judaimi, group head for principal investment at GIC.
Kuwait-based GIC, which is equally owned by all six members of the GCC economic bloc, reported a net profit of $131 million in 2022.