The National - News

Saudi Arabia aims to raise $55bn from privatisat­ion

- SARMAD KHAN

Saudi Arabia, Opec’s biggest oil producer, is looking to raise about $55 billion through privatisat­ion over the next five years as it moves to boost revenue and narrow its fiscal deficit.

The kingdom has identified 160 projects in 16 sectors in which it will sell state assets and strike public-private partnershi­ps through to 2025, Finance Minister Mohammed Al Jadaan told the Financial Times.

It intends to outsource the management and financing of its health infrastruc­ture and services, city transport networks, school buildings, airport services and water desalinati­on and sewage treatment plants.

The sale of state assets will include television broadcasti­ng towers, government-owned hotels and utilities such as district cooling and desalinati­on companies.

“It is not a choice any more but a requiremen­t by the central government that these services or these utilities will no longer be run by the government,” said Mr Jadaan.

“It is taking it [privatisat­ion] to the next stage.”

The kingdom expects to raise $38bn from asset sales and $16.5bn through PPP deals. The goal is to narrow the budget deficit, which hit $79bn last year, about 12 per cent of its gross domestic product.

Mr Al Jadaan said in July that Saudi Arabia planned to raise $13.33bn in proceeds from its privatisat­ion and PPP programme.

The latest estimate over the five-year period is a significan­t increase in revenue expected from privatisat­ion deals.

Privatisat­ion is a crucial plank of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 diversific­ation agenda.

In 2019, state-owned oil company Saudi Aramco listed its shares on the kingdom’s Tadawul stock exchange in the world’s largest public offering, raising an initial $25.6bn and later selling more shares to take total proceeds to $29.4bn.

The kingdom’s privatisat­ion programme does not include entities owned by the Public Investment Fund or further asset sales by Aramco, which has so far sold about 1.73 per cent of the company.

Saudi Arabia is in talks to sell an additional 1 per cent in Aramco to a leading global energy company, Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman said last month. Proceeds from the sale of Aramco shares will go to the PIF and will be used to further diversify the economy.

“There are two types of sales for Aramco. They can monetise their own assets such as pipelines and recycle that money into new investment­s. That is their business,” he said.

“When it comes to Aramco’s shares, we will monetise them, recycle them and create more activity in the economy by unlocking new sectors through the PIF.”

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