Arab Times

Saudi investment­s in Egypt focus on infra over 3 years

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CAIRO, Dec 17, (RTRS): Saudi Arabia’s planned $8 billion of investment­s in Egypt are likely to arrive over the next three years and focus on infrastruc­ture projects, the deputy head of the Saudi-Egyptian Business Council said on Thursday.

Saudi Arabia’s King Salman said on Tuesday that his country’s investment­s in Egypt should exceed 30 billion Saudi riyals ($8 billion) and that the oil-exporting Gulf kingdom would help meet Egypt’s petroleum needs for the next five years.

He did not give details and Egyptian officials have said that specific projects were largely still under discussion.

Egypt received pledges of $12 billion from Gulf Arab allies at an investment conference in Sharm al-Sheikh in March, where President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi urged foreign investors to help Egypt recover from turmoil that has undermined the economy since the 2011 uprising that overthrew Hosni Mubarak.

About $6 billion was quickly deposited in Egypt’s central bank to help replenish its dwindling foreign currency reserves. The rest was to come as investment­s, much of which are still being negotiated.

“The investment­s that the Saudi (king) ordered are all new government investment­s,” Abdallah bin Mahfouz, the deputy head of the Saudi-Egyptian Business Council, told Reuters by telephone.

“I expect that the implementa­tion period would be three years and be directed towards infrastruc­ture as well as some of the logistical, industrial and commercial projects that were announced at Sharm al-Sheikh.”

Gulf countries have showered Egypt with billions of dollars in grants, investment­s and petroleum aid since mid-2013, when then-military chief Sisi removed the Muslim Brotherhoo­d from power following mass protests. Sisi went on to win a presidenti­al poll.

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