- All the latest news, data, and market intelligence across MENA at your fingerprints
- First-hand updates and inside information on projects, clients and competitors that matter to you
- 20 years' archive of information, data, and news for you to access at your convenience
- Strategize to succeed and minimise risks with timely analysis of current and future market trends
Latest News
-
Kuwait picks preferred bidder for real estate PPP22 January 2026

Register for MEED’s 14-day trial access
Local firm United Real Estate Company has bid the highest for a contract to develop the third phase of a waterfront real estate project located in the Sharq area of Kuwait City.
The firm made the announcement in a filing with Boursa Kuwait, where it is listed.
The commercial offers were opened on 21 January, after Kuwait’s Finance Ministry and the Kuwait Authority for Partnership Projects had approved technical bids from seven groups for a contract to develop the project, as MEED reported.
The scope includes rehabilitation, renovation, development, operation and maintenance and management of the project under a 15-year usufruct arrangement.
The project covers an area of 384,385 square metres and is being developed on a public-private partnership (PPP) basis.
The other groups that are bidding for the project include:
- Mabanee / Al-Durra National Real Estate Company
- Al-Tijaria Real Estate Company / Al-Mutajara Real Estate Company / Al-Salmiya Group for Development
- Arkan Real Estate Company / National Investments / Real Estate House / Al-Safat Investment / Al-Buyout Holding / SAK Construction
- National Real Estate Company / United Projects Company
- Al-Hamra Group / Al-Hani Group
- Aayan Real Estate Company / Al-Enmaa Real Estate Company
UK analytics firm GlobalData expects Kuwait’s construction industry to grow by 5.1% in 2026-29, supported by government investment in the oil and gas sector aimed at raising production, as well as investment in the infrastructure sector.
In the short term, growth will be boosted by planned expenditure under the 2025-26 budget, which was approved in March 2025.
The construction industry in Kuwait is expected to record an annual average growth rate of 4.9% in 2026-29, supported by investments in renewable energy, transport and oil and gas projects.
The commercial construction sector is expected to grow by 4.8% in 2026-29, supported by public- and private-sector investment in the construction of hotels, retail outlets and office buildings.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15490605/main.png -
Saudi Landbridge rail scheme to be delivered by 203421 January 2026
Register for MEED’s 14-day trial access
Saudi Arabia Railways (SAR) has said that it will deliver the Saudi Landbridge project through a "new mechanism" by 2034, after failing to reach an agreement with a Chinese consortium for the construction of the project.
In an interview with local media, SAR CEO Bashar Bin Khalid Al-Malik said that the consortium failed to meet local content requirements, and the project will now be delivered in several phases through a different procurement model.
The project has been under negotiation between Saudi Arabia and China-backed investors keen to develop it on a public-private-partnership basis.
Al-Malik said that the project cost is about SR100bn ($26.6bn).
It comprises more than 1,500 kilometres (km) of new track. The core component is a 900km new railway between Riyadh and Jeddah, which will provide direct freight access to the capital from King Abdullah Port on the Red Sea.
Other key sections include upgrading the existing Riyadh-Dammam line, a bypass around the capital called the Riyadh Link, and a link between King Abdullah Port and Yanbu.
The Saudi Landbridge is one of the kingdom’s most anticipated project programmes. Plans to develop it were first announced in 2004, but put on hold in 2010 before being revived a year later. Key stumbling blocks were rights-of-way issues, route alignment and its high cost.
In April last year, MEED exclusively reported that SAR had issued a tender for the lead design consultancy services contract on the Saudi Landbridge railway network.
MEED understands that the scope covered the concept design and options for the preliminary and issued-for-construction design stages on the network.
MEED reported that the launch of a design tender directly by SAR suggested that Riyadh was looking at other options to develop it alongside the Chinese proposal.
In December 2023, MEED reported that a team of US-based Hill International, Italy’s Italferr and Spain’s Sener had been awarded the contract to provide project management services for the programme.
If it proceeds, the Saudi Landbridge will be one of the largest railway projects ever undertaken in the Middle East and one of the biggest globally. Based on typical design timeframes, tenders for construction are likely to be ready by mid-2026, although the question of how it will be financed will need to be answered before it can proceed to the next step.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15475837/main.gif -
Firms submit bids for Dorra gas scheme PMC21 January 2026

Register for MEED’s 14-day trial access
Engineering firms have submitted bids to Al-Khafji Joint Operations (KJO) for a tender covering project management consultancy (PMC) for the multibillion-dollar Dorra gas field facilities development project.
MEED reported last March that KJO was pushing forwards with a project to produce gas from the Dorra offshore field, located in Gulf waters in the Neutral Zone shared by Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.
KJO has divided the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) scope of work on the project to produce gas from the Dorra field into four EPC packages – three offshore and one onshore.
The broad scope of services under the tender involves providing PMC for EPC works for the Dorra gas facilities development project.
Firms submitted bids for the PMC tender by the deadline of 19 January, sources told MEED.
KJO issued the tender for PMC services for EPC works on the Dorra gas facilities development project on 29 September. Engineering firms were initially given until 24 November to submit bids for the tender, with that deadline then extended until 15 December and then finally until 19 January, according to sources.
Sources said that the following firms, among others, are understood to be bidding for the PMC tender:
- Fluor (US)
- KBR (US)
- Kent (Saudi Arabia/UAE)
- Tecnicas Reunidas (Spain)
- Wood (UK)
- Worley (Australia)
KJO hosted a job explanation meeting with the bidders for the tender on 15 October, the sources said.
KJO offshore and onshore facilities
KJO, which is jointly owned by Aramco subsidiary Aramco Gulf Operations Company (AGOC) and KPC subsidiary Kuwait Gulf Oil Company (KGOC), is moving forward with its Dorra gas field facilities project. KJO has divided the project’s scope of work into four EPC packages – three offshore and one onshore.
Indian contractor Larsen & Toubro Energy Hydrocarbon (L&TEH) has won package 1 of the Dorra facilities project, which covers the EPC of seven offshore jackets and the laying of intra-field pipelines. The contract awarded by KJO to L&TEH is estimated to be valued between $140m and $150m, MEED reported in October.
Contractors are presently preparing to submit bids for the remaining three packages — offshore packages 2A and 2B, and onshore package 3 by 26 January, sources told MEED. KJO has extended the bid submission deadlines for these packages multiple times.
The EPC scope of work for package 2A includes Dorra gas field wellhead topsides, flowlines and umbilicals. Package 2B involves the central gathering platform complex, export pipelines and cables. Package 3 includes the EPC of onshore gas processing facilities.
Saudi Arabia and Kuwait are pressing ahead with their ambitious plan to jointly produce 1 billion cubic feet a day (cf/d) of gas from the Dorra gas field, located in the waters of their shared Neutral Zone. Discovered in 1965, the Dorra gas field is estimated to hold 20 trillion cubic metres of gas and 310 million barrels of oil.
Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have been producing oil from the Neutral Zone – primarily from the onshore Wafra field and offshore Khafji field – since at least the 1950s. With a growing need to increase natural gas production, both countries have been working to exploit the Dorra offshore field, understood to be the only gas field in the Neutral Zone.
The Dorra facilities project is one of three major multibillion-dollar projects launched by subsidiaries of Saudi Aramco and Kuwait Petroleum Corporation (KPC) to produce and process gas from the Dorra field that have been advancing over the past few months.
AGOC onshore Khafji gas plant
Meanwhile, AGOC has extended the bid submission deadline for seven EPC packages as part of a project to construct the Khafji gas plant, which will process gas from the Dorra field onshore Saudi Arabia, until 22 April.
MEED previously reported that AGOC had issued main tenders for the seven EPC packages earlier in 2025. Contractors were initially set deadlines of 24 October for technical bid submissions and 9 November for submission of commercial bids, which was then extended by AGOC until 22 December.
The seven EPC packages cover a wide range of works, including open-art and licensed process facilities, pipelines, industrial support infrastructure, site preparation, overhead transmission lines, power supply systems, and main operational and administrative buildings.
France-based Technip Energies has carried out a concept study and front-end engineering and design (feed) work on the entire Dorra gas field development programme.
Progress has been hampered by a geopolitical dispute over ownership of the Dorra gas field. Iran, which refers to the field as Arash, claims it partially extends into Iranian territory and asserts that Tehran should be a stakeholder in its development. Kuwait and Saudi Arabia maintain that the field lies entirely within their jointly administered Neutral Zone – also known as the Divided Zone – and that Iran has no legal basis for its claim.
In February 2024, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia reiterated their claim to the Dorra field in a joint statement issued during an official meeting in Riyadh between Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Mishal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah and Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed Bin Salman Bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud.
Since that show of strength and unity, projects targeting production and processing of gas from the Dorra field have gained momentum.
KGOC onshore processing facilities
KGOC has initiated early engagement with contractors for the main EPC tendering process for a planned Dorra onshore gas processing facility, which is to be located in Kuwait.
KGOC is in the feed stage of the project, which is estimated to be valued at up to $3.3bn, and is now expected to issue the main EPC tender in the second quarter of this year, MEED recently reported.
The proposed facility will receive gas via a pipeline from the Dorra offshore field, which is being separately developed by KJO. The complex will have the capacity to process up to 632 million cf/d of gas and 88.9 million barrels a day of condensates from the Dorra field.
The facility will be located near the Al-Zour refinery, owned by another KPC subsidiary, Kuwait Integrated Petroleum Industries Company (Kipic).
A 700,000-square-metre plot has been allocated next to the Al-Zour refinery for the gas processing facility, and discussions regarding survey work are ongoing. The site may require shoring, backfilling and dewatering.
The onshore gas processing plant will also supply surplus gas to KPC’s upstream business, Kuwait Oil Company (KOC), for possible injection into its oil fields.
Additionally, KGOC plans to award licensed technology contracts to US-based Honeywell UOP and Shell subsidiary Shell Catalysts & Technologies for the plant’s acid gas removal unit and sulphur recovery unit, respectively.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15472237/main3457.jpg -
Libya announces $2.7bn Misurata Port expansion21 January 2026
Register for MEED’s 14-day trial access
Libya has announced the $2.7bn expansion of Misurata Port, led by Terminal Investment Limited.
The consortium comprises Switzerland's Mediterranean Shipping Company and Qatari firm Maha Capital Partners.
The project is being implemented under a public-private partnership model, and is the first of its kind in the country's non-oil sector
The expansion aims to increase the port's container-handling capacity to 4 million containers a year.
Misurata Free Zone (MFZ) is Libya’s largest free zone, spanning an area of 2,576 hectares.
According to an MFZ statement, the expansion includes:
- Expanding container-handling capacity to accommodate larger vessels and more complex logistics chains;
- Integrating port operations with MFZ’s industrial ecosystem to support small and medium-sized entities, manufacturing and value-added services;
- Deploying modern terminal equipment and digital systems;
- Enhancing safety, performance and environmental standards in line with global benchmarks;
- Creating long-term employment opportunities.
The Libyan Prime Minister’s Office said the expanded port is expected to generate around $600m in annual operating revenues, create about 8,400 direct jobs and support nearly 60,000 indirect jobs.
The investment scope includes:
- Five ship-to-shore (STS) gantry cranes
- 10 mobile harbour cranes
- Eight rubber-tired gantry (RTG) cranes
- 32 reach stackers
- Eight other pieces of equipment, like trucks and forklifts
The project's first phase will raise container-handling capacity to 1.5 million 20-foot equivalent units (TEU), increase throughput by 7% and develop and manage berths to 2,000 metres in total.
It also includes installing six RTG cranes and three STS cranes, developing 56 acres of container yards, building a 2,096-square-metre (sq m) refrigerated container warehouse and constructing an additional 7,500 sq m facility.
An advanced terminal operating system will also be implemented.
The second phase will add a further 2.5 million TEUs of capacity, construct a 2,500-metre breakwater, build a new 1,200-metre berth and a new 60-acre container yard, and deepen the port to 17 metres.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15471059/main.jpg -
Adnoc Gas stalls decision on Ruwais NGL project21 January 2026

Adnoc Gas is understood to be considering next steps regarding the progress of its project to install a fifth natural gas liquids (NGL) fractionation train at its Ruwais gas processing facility in Abu Dhabi.
The fifth NGL fractionation train will have an output capacity of 22,000 tonnes a day (t/d), or about 8 million tonnes a year.
Adnoc Gas, the natural gas processing business of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc Group), has adopted the design-update competition model to deliver the Ruwais NGL Train 5 project, MEED previously reported.
Contractors participating in the design-update competition for the project submitted commercial bids for engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) works by the deadline of 8 December, as part of the design‑update competition.
The design-update competition model involves the project operator selecting contractors to execute front-end engineering and design (feed) work on the project. The operator selects the contractor with the most competitive feed proposal to execute EPC works on the project, while also compensating the other contestants for their work.
Since receiving commercial bids from contractors in early December, however, Adnoc Gas is understood to have gone back to the drawing board to decide on the next course of action, according to sources.
Sources attribute the delay in contractor selection to bids received by Adnoc Gas that exceeded its budget.
In January 2025, MEED reported that Adnoc Gas had selected the following contractors to participate in the design-update competition for the Ruwais NGL Train 5 project:
- JGC Corporation (Japan)
- Technip Energies (France)
- Tecnimont (Italy)
MEED previously reported that participants had submitted technical proposals for feed work on 6 October.
The Ruwais NGL Train 5 project represents the second phase of Adnoc Gas’ Rich Gas Development programme and is estimated to be valued at $3.5bn-$4bn, according to the company’s chief financial officer, Peter Van Driel.
In a call with journalists in November to discuss Adnoc Gas’ financial results for the third quarter of 2025, Van Driel said Adnoc Gas was expected to achieve a final investment decision on the Habshan 7 gas train project in the first half of 2026.
ALSO READ: Adnoc Gas capex budget to rise to $28bn by 2029
The scope of work on the Ruwais NGL Train 5 project covers the EPC of the following units:
- NGL fractionation plant with a capacity of 22,000 t/d, including NGL fractionation facilities, downstream treatment units, sulphur recovery units, product storage, loading facilities and associated utilities, flares and interconnection pipelines with existing facilities;
- Two propane liquefied petroleum gas storage tanks and one paraffinic naphtha storage tank;
- Buildings – a central control building, outstations, substations and plant amenities;
- Electrical power connections. Power is to be sourced from the nearby Transco substation via a direct underground cable to the plot location.
Adnoc Gas requires the feed on the project to be updated based on the design of Ruwais NGL Train 4, which has an output capacity of 27,000 t/d and was commissioned in 2014.
In December 2021, MEED reported that Adnoc Gas, then operating as Adnoc Gas Processing, had awarded Indian contractor Larsen & Toubro Hydrocarbon Engineering the main contract for a project to enhance the capacity of its NGL trains 1-4 at the Ruwais complex.
Adnoc Gas business
Adnoc Group announced the creation of Adnoc Gas through the merger of its subsidiaries Adnoc Gas Processing and Adnoc LNG in November 2022. Adnoc Gas began operating as a commercial entity on 1 January 2023.
The consolidation of Adnoc’s gas processing and liquefied natural gas (LNG) operations into Adnoc Gas has created one of the world’s largest gas-processing entities, with a processing capacity of about 10 billion standard cubic feet of gas a day at eight onshore and offshore sites, which include its Asab, Bab, Bu Hasa, Habshan and Ruwais plants.
The company also owns a 3,250-kilometre (km) gas pipeline network to supply feedstock to its customers in the UAE. This sales gas pipeline network is being expanded to over 3,500km through the estimated $3bn Estidama project.
The company will also acquire its parent Adnoc Group’s 60% share in the Ruwais LNG terminal project at cost in the second half of 2028. UK energy producer BP, Japan’s Mitsui & Co, UK-based Shell and French energy producer TotalEnergies are the other shareholders in the project, holding 10% stakes each.
Adnoc Gas share sale
In February 2025, Adnoc Group completed a marketed offering of approximately 3.1 billion shares in Adnoc Gas, raising $2.8bn from the exercise.
The offering consisted of 3,070,056,880 shares, representing 4% of the issued and outstanding share capital of Adnoc Gas.
Following the marketed offering of shares, Adnoc Group continues to hold the majority 86% of shares in Adnoc Gas.
The parent entity listed 5% of Adnoc Gas’ shares on the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange in March 2023, in an initial public offering from which it raised about $2.5bn.
Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (Taqa) owns the remaining 5% shares in Adnoc Gas.
ALSO READ: Contractors submit prices for Habshan 7 project to Adnoc Gas
READ THE JANUARY 2026 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDFSaudi Arabia courts real estate investment; EVs and battery production are key regional tech themes; Muscat holds a steady growth course despite headwinds
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the January 2026 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA: Saudi real estate to surge in 2026> BATTERIES: Batteries shape the region's energy future> INTERVIEW: Tabreed finishes the year on a high> CONTRACTORS: Managing risk in the GCC construction market> ECONOMIC ACTIVITY INDEX: UAE and Qatar emerge as markets to watch> AIRSHOW: Top deals signed at Dubai Airshow 2025> MARKET FOCUS: Oman steadies growth with strategic restraintTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15470038/main2126.jpg -
Riyadh begins Qiddiya high-speed rail prequalification20 January 2026

Saudi Arabia's Royal Commission for Riyadh City, in collaboration with Qiddiya Investment Company and the National Centre for Privatisation & PPP, have started the prequalification process for the development of the Qiddiya high-speed rail project in Riyadh.
The prequalification notice was issued on 19 January, with a submission deadline of 17 March.
The clients are considering undertaking the project using a public-private partnership (PPP) model or under an engineering, procurement, construction and financing basis.
Firms have been asked to prequalify for either of the two models.
The Qiddiya high-speed rail project will connect King Salman International airport and King Abdullah Financial District (KAFD) in Riyadh with Qiddiya City.
Also known as Q-Express, the railway line will travel at speeds of up to 250 kilometres an hour, reaching Qiddiya in 30 minutes.
The line is expected to be developed in two phases. The first phase will connect Qiddiya with KAFD and King Khalid International airport.
The second phase will start from a development known as the North Pole – which is understood to include the Public Investment Fund’s proposed 2-kilometre-tall tower – and travel to the New Murabba development, King Salman Park, central Riyadh and Industrial City in the south of Riyadh.
In November last year, MEED reported that over 145 local and international companies had expressed their interest in developing the project.
These included 68 contracting companies, 23 design and project management consultants, 16 investment firms, 12 rail operators, 10 rolling stock providers and 16 other services firms.
In November 2023, MEED reported that French consultant Egis had been appointed as the technical adviser for the project.
UK-based consultancy Ernst & Young is acting as the transaction adviser on the project. Latham & Watkins is the legal adviser.
Qiddiya is one of Saudi Arabia’s five official gigaprojects and covers a total area of 376 square kilometres (sq km), with 223 sq km of developed land.
READ THE JANUARY 2026 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDFSaudi Arabia courts real estate investment; EVs and battery production are key regional tech themes; Muscat holds a steady growth course despite headwinds
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the January 2026 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA: Saudi real estate to surge in 2026> BATTERIES: Batteries shape the region's energy future> INTERVIEW: Tabreed finishes the year on a high> CONTRACTORS: Managing risk in the GCC construction market> ECONOMIC ACTIVITY INDEX: UAE and Qatar emerge as markets to watch> AIRSHOW: Top deals signed at Dubai Airshow 2025> MARKET FOCUS: Oman steadies growth with strategic restraintTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15468745/main.gif -
Aramco picks consultant for New Energies scheme20 January 2026

Saudi Aramco has appointed an engineering consultant for a programme to potentially expand the remit of its New Energies business division through the study and analysis of clean energy projects in Saudi Arabia and overseas.
US-based KBR has won the contract to provide project management consultancy (PMC) services, as well as front-end engineering and design (feed) and pre-feed services, according to sources.
The duration of the contract will be seven years, with an option to extend for three years.
MEED reported that Aramco issued the tender for PMC services in the first quarter of 2025. The company later added the provision of feed and pre-feed to the tender’s scope.
Firms submitted proposals for the New Energies PMC, pre-feed and feed services tender by the final deadline of 17 July, MEED previously reported.
KBR will be required to deliver PMC, feasibility studies, pre-feed, feed and ad-hoc studies for Aramco related to specified domains of its energy portfolio.
According to the sources, in addiition to KBR, the following firms are understood to have submitted bids for the tender:
- Bechtel (US)
- Fluor (US)
- Technip Energies (France)
- Wood (UK)
- Worley (Australia)
Aramco announced the launch of the New Energies business line in 2023, “following the endorsement of our long-term strategy to achieve lower-carbon solutions and for Aramco to meet its GHG (greenhouse gas) emissions mitigation and abatement ambitions”.
“Over the next few years, we have allocated around 10% of our capital investments in New Energies to help us progress in our GHG emissions mitigation and abatement journey,” the company said in its Sustainability Report 2023.
Through this programme, the Saudi energy giant intends to boost the portfolio of its New Energies business specifically in the following domains:
- Hydrogen and ammonia – Development of blue and green hydrogen and low-carbon ammonia for domestic use and export, as well as low-carbon aviation and e-fuels;
- Carbon capture, utilisation and storage – Large-scale projects to reduce industrial emissions of carbon dioxide, including the building of compression, sequestration and transportation systems;
- Energy efficiency and circular economy – Innovations to reduce waste and improve operational sustainability;
- Research and development – Fostering technology developments with lab and pilot scale for clean energy;
- Renewable energy – Solar and wind projects along with energy storage systems, to diversify energy sources, limited to power purchase agreements;
- Advanced materials – Research into sustainable materials and energy storage technologies.
ALSO READ: Aramco issues fresh batch of key offshore EPCI tenders
READ THE JANUARY 2026 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDFSaudi Arabia courts real estate investment; EVs and battery production are key regional tech themes; Muscat holds a steady growth course despite headwinds
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the January 2026 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA: Saudi real estate to surge in 2026> BATTERIES: Batteries shape the region's energy future> INTERVIEW: Tabreed finishes the year on a high> CONTRACTORS: Managing risk in the GCC construction market> ECONOMIC ACTIVITY INDEX: UAE and Qatar emerge as markets to watch> AIRSHOW: Top deals signed at Dubai Airshow 2025> MARKET FOCUS: Oman steadies growth with strategic restraintTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15468736/main1037.jpg -
Ras Al-Khaimah awards sewage PPP contract20 January 2026
A consortium of Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (Taqa), France’s Saur and the local Etihad Water & Electricity (Etihad WE) has signed a contract to develop and operate a wastewater treatment plant in the UAE’s northern emirate of Ras Al-Khaimah.
The Rakwa wastewater infrastructure project is Ras Al-Khaimah’s first public-private partnership (PPP) for a sewage treatment plant.
It is being developed in partnership with Ras Al-Khaimah’s Public Services Department and Investment & Development Office.
The $120m project entails developing a wastewater treatment plant with a capacity of 60,000 cubic metres a day (cm/d), expandable to 150,000 cm/d.
On 9 January, MEED exclusively reported that the consortium was set to be awarded the contract. The consortium is being led by Ajman-based Emirates Utilities Development Company, a subsidiary of Etihad WE.
US/India-based Synergy Consulting is the financial advisory consultant to Taqa and EtihadWE on this project.
MEED previously reported that two bidding consortiums had submitted bids for the contract. The other bidding consortium comprised the UAE’s Metito Utilities and Omani firm Sogex.
The scope of the build, own, operate and transfer scheme will include extensive sewerage and distribution works in addition to the main treatment plant.
Future PPP project
For its part, Etihad WE is preparing to procure another utility PPP project in Ras Al-Khaimah.
The project involves expanding the capacity of an existing seawater reverse osmosis plant in Ghalilah, which became operational in 2015.
The state-owned utility recently appointed Austria’s ILF Consulting Engineers to provide technical advisory services for the project, which is expected to be tendered this year.
If successfully procured, it will be the first independent water project in Ras Al-Khaimah.
READ THE JANUARY 2026 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDFSaudi Arabia courts real estate investment; EVs and battery production are key regional tech themes; Muscat holds a steady growth course despite headwinds
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the January 2026 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA: Saudi real estate to surge in 2026> BATTERIES: Batteries shape the region's energy future> INTERVIEW: Tabreed finishes the year on a high> CONTRACTORS: Managing risk in the GCC construction market> ECONOMIC ACTIVITY INDEX: UAE and Qatar emerge as markets to watch> AIRSHOW: Top deals signed at Dubai Airshow 2025> MARKET FOCUS: Oman steadies growth with strategic restraintTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15465691/main.jpg
Top Trending Articles
- Top pending projects in 2024
- Abu Dhabi to tender Project Wave phase two in 2024
- Neom hydrogen project reaches 60% completion rate
- Samsung C&T to undertake Amiral cogen EPC
- Masdar completes Terna Energy acquisition
- Top 10 GCC contractors by country
- Gigaproject seeks firms for Riyadh rail link
- Joint venture selected for Oxagon port work
Exclusive from Meed
-
Oman signs PPAs for Misfah and Duqm power plants23 January 2026
-
Chiyoda wins feed contract for North Field West LNG project23 January 2026
-
Kuwait picks preferred bidder for real estate PPP22 January 2026
-
Saudi Landbridge rail scheme to be delivered by 203421 January 2026
-
Firms submit bids for Dorra gas scheme PMC21 January 2026
All of this is only 1% of what MEED.com has to offer
Subscribe now and unlock all the 153,671 articles on MEED.com
-
Digital Subscription
$175/monthPaid Annually
-
MEED.com
Unlimited access to 20 year archive on desktop and mobile
-
Video Content
All the latest news and analysis in a convenient video format
-
Daily/Weekly Newsletters
Receive your choice of sector and country newsletters at your preferred frequency
-
MEED.com
-
Premium Subscription
$291/monthPaid Annually
-
MEED.com
Unlimited access to 20 year archive on desktop and mobile
-
Video Content
All the latest news and analysis in a convenient video format
-
Daily/Weekly Newsletters
Receive your choice of sector and country newsletters at your preferred frequency
-
MEED Premium Datasets
Access five interactive datasets and conduct your own research into market trends, deals and companies
-
MEED Bussiness Review Magazine
Get our unique, forward looking commentary and analysis delivered to your desktop
-
Regular Subscriber Briefings
Network with industry leaders and fellow colleagues in an informal setting
-
Account Manager/Training
A dedicated account manager for all your requests and enquiries to make the most the platform
-
MEED.com