The Telegram (St. John's)

Saudi Arabia plans to build futuristic city

- BY AYA BATRAWY AND ABDULLAH AL-SHIHRI

Saudi Arabia’s powerful crown prince on Tuesday announced plans to build a futuristic city run entirely on alternativ­e sources of energy and said the ultraconse­rvative kingdom must return to “moderate Islam.”

The $500-billion “Neom” project, envisioned as a hub for technologi­cal innovation, will be funded by the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, which the prince oversees, as well as the Saudi government and a range of private and internatio­nal investors.

“This place is not for convention­al people or convention­al companies,” Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman told an audience of investors from around the world gathered in the capital, Riyadh, on Tuesday. “This will be a place for the dreamers of the world.”

It’s the latest surprise move by Saudi Arabia, a country that for decades has been characteri­zed by slow, cautious reforms, bureaucrat­ic red tape and promises that fall short of target. The kingdom was forced to spring into action nearly three years ago after global energy prices fell by more than half, threatenin­g to deplete Saudi foreign reserves and spending

power by 2020.

Now, the kingdom is on a mission to build the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund to invest in projects like Neom. The aim is to diversify revenue away from oil exports and create more jobs under a plan spearheade­d by the crown prince known as Vision 2030.

No reform, however, was more disruptive to the old order than last month’s decision to lift the ban on women driving next summer. Saudi Arabia is also expected to bring back cinemas soon as it opens the ultraconse­rvative country to

more entertainm­ent.

Prince Mohammed defended these reforms at the conference on Tuesday, saying, “We were not like this in the past.”

“We want to go back to what we were: moderate Islam,” the prince said during his rare public appearance.

The heir to the throne said the kingdom will work to defeat extremist ideas and ensure young Saudis live in harmony with the rest of the world.

He was speaking on a panel that included business titans Stephen Schwarzman of U.S. private equity firm Blackstone and Masayoshi Son of Japan’s technology conglomera­te Softbank.

For many middle- and lowerincom­e Saudi families, the prince’s reform blueprint is long overdue.

Most Saudis hold jobs with the government, where wages for many can average just a few hundred dollars a month. Still, the public-sector wage bill eats up about half of the government’s total expenditur­e. As part of Vision 2030, the government plans to trim the publicsect­or workforce by about 20 per cent while ensuring there are enough jobs in the private sector to keep up with demand.

Over the next decade, an estimated 5 million young Saudis will enter the workforce, creating an urgent need for rapid job creation.

Projects like Neom are focused on creating some of those jobs. The independen­t economic zone in the northweste­rn region of the country, near Egypt and Jordan, sits on 26,500 square kilometres of untouched land along the Red Sea.

The crown prince envisions it as a hub for innovation, where scientists would develop new technologi­es and investors would make healthy returns. It’s a place, he said, where drones, driverless cars and robotics might all work together to ensure there’s no traffic, for example.

 ?? SAUDI PRESS AGENCY ?? Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman speaks Tuesday at the opening ceremony of the Future Investment Initiative Conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
SAUDI PRESS AGENCY Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman speaks Tuesday at the opening ceremony of the Future Investment Initiative Conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

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