Arid Saudi could need ‘$50 billion’ in water investment

A Yemeni girls carries jerrycans to fill them with water from a public tap amid an acute shortage of water supply to houses in the country's third-largest city Taez on September 3, 2015. Sunni power Saudi Arabia is leading a coalition that has been bombing the Iran-backed Huthis, which has driven the rebels out of Yemen's second city Aden and four other southern provinces and is now fighting for control of the third city of Taez. AFP PHOTO / AHMAD AL-BASHA / AFP PHOTO / AHMAD AL-BASHA

A Yemeni girls carries jerrycans to fill them with water from a public tap amid an acute shortage of water supply to houses in the country’s third-largest city Taez on September 3, 2015.  AFP FILE PHOTO

Arid Saudi Arabia could need more than $53 billion in water sector investment supported by private funds as demand grows, officials said on Sunday.

The world’s largest oil exporter, whose petroleum revenues fell 51 percent last year on declining crude prices, is pushing to diversify its economy through greater private sector investment and development of new industries.

Among government agencies targeted for privatization is the Saline Water Conversion Corporation (SWCC), which desalinates water from the Gulf and Red Sea coasts.

“Future plants will be tendered to the private sector,” Ali al-Hazmi, SWCC governor, told the government-organized Water Investment Forum.

“We have everything ready for privatization.”

The desert kingdom, which has no rivers, obtains most of its water from desalination and the rest from ground sources.

“This requires a lot of money and a lot of capital investment,” Mansour al-Mushaiti, a deputy minister with the ministry of environment, water and agriculture, told the forum.

“We are envisaging that the capital requirements in the next five years will reach up to 200 billion Saudi riyals ($53.3 billion).”

SWCC, created in 1974, is the world’s largest producer of desalinated water. It operates 28 plants and as part of the process is able to generate electricity for the national power grid.

Saudi water demand is increasing by more than five percent annually, Hazmi said at the start of the two-day forum.

By 2020 the kingdom is targeting 52 percent of desalinated water production through “strategic partners.”

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