Gulf News

Saudi privatisat­ion programme targets $10b

INITIATIVE EYES 14 PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHI­P INVESTMENT­S WORTH 24B TO 28B RIYALS

-

Saudi Arabia aims to generate 35 billion to 40 billion riyals ($9 billion to $11 billion) in non-oil revenues from its privatisat­ion programme by 2020 and create up to 12,000 jobs, according to a document published by the official Saudi Press Agency on Tuesday.

The initiative targets 14 public-private partnershi­p investment­s worth 24 billion to 28 billion riyals. It includes the corporatis­ation of Saudi ports and the privatisat­ion of the production sector at the Saudi Saline Water Conversion Corp (SWCC) and the Ras Al Khair desalinati­on and power plant, the document showed.

The government has said it plans to raise about $200 billion (Dh734 billion) through privatisat­ion in coming years as part of “Vision 2030” reforms that aim to transform the economy of the world’s top oil exporter. It separately wants to raise another $100 billion through the sale of a five per cent stake in Saudi Aramco.

Football league

The new implementa­tion document released on Tuesday charts the way forward for the period ending in 2020, during which the government plans to privatise the National Football League, flour mills at the General Silos and Flour Mills Organisati­on and part of SWCC.

It will also work on corporatis­ing ports, privatisin­g some services in the transporta­tion sector, and transformi­ng King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre into a non-profit organisati­on. ■

Most of these processes will be limited to corporatis­ation and preparator­y procedures, with full privatisat­ion not expected before 2020, according to the document. The government also plans to introduce a new indicator to evaluate the privatisat­ion process in each target sector based on the number of bids submitted by the private sector and their value compared with the original financial value.

The full programme has over 100 potential initiative­s in more than 10 sectors.

School buildings and desalinati­on facilities producing fresh water will feature in some of the first deals as Saudi Arabia transfers a quarter of its economy to private hands, an official overseeing the process said yesterday.

Turki A. Al Hokail, chief executive of the National Centre for Privatisat­ion and Public-Private Partnershi­ps, was speaking as the government formally launched a vast privatisat­ion programme focusing on 10 sectors of the economy.

Riyadh is working on new rules to attract foreign as well as local capital to the scheme and will address potential investors’ concern about their level of control over projects, including their ability to hire and fire workers, Hokail said.

“This is a big change in the economy. The government is moving from operating projects to monitoring and regulating them,” he said in a telephone interview. “Operations will be the job of the private sector.”

Hokail said Riyadh was willing in principle to consider sales of 100 per cent stakes in state firms, but decisions on each deal would depend on investor demand and market conditions.

The rest of the money would come from public-private partnershi­ps (PPPs) — deals in which private companies invest in infrastruc­ture and are paid to operate it for a period, before eventually transferri­ng it to the state.

The government has said it plans to raise about $200 billion (Dh734 billion) through privatisat­ion in coming years as part of “Vision 2030” reforms that aim to transform the economy of the world’s top oil exporter.

 ??  ??
 ?? Reuters ?? The King Abdullah Financial District, north of Riyadh. The full programme by the Saudi government has over 100 potential initiative­s in more than 10 sectors.
Reuters The King Abdullah Financial District, north of Riyadh. The full programme by the Saudi government has over 100 potential initiative­s in more than 10 sectors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates