Buhur, Nesma and Aljomaih bid low for Jubail-Buraydah link

12 November 2024

A developer team comprising local companies Aljomaih Energy & Water, Nesma Company and Buhur for Investment Company has been named as the preferred bidder for the contract to develop and operate Saudi Arabia’s second independent water transmission pipeline (IWTP) project.

The project will link Jubail in the kingdom’s Eastern Province and Buraydah in the Qassim region over a 587-kilometre (km) pipeline that can transmit 650,000 cubic metres a day of water.

The Aljomaih, Nesma and Buhur team proposed to develop the Jubail-Buraydah IWTP project for SR3.59468 a cubic metre.

Saudi Water Partnership Company (SWPC) has also named a second team, comprising the local Vision Invest and UAE-based Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (Taqa), as the reserved bidder.

The Vision Invest/Taqa team offered to develop the project for SR5.04214/cm.

The Jubail-Buraydah IWTP project is larger than the kingdom’s first IWTP linking Rayis and Rabigh, which a consortium including the local Alkhorayef Water & Power Technologies Company and Spain’s Cobra Instalaciones y Servicios will develop and operate at a cost of SR7.78bn ($2bn).

SWPC issued the request for proposals for the Jubail-Buraydah IWTP scheme to prequalified bidders in October last year.

The transaction advisory team for the client comprises the US/India’s Synergy Consulting as financial adviser and the local Amer Al-Amr and Germany’s Fichtner Consulting as legal and technical advisers, respectively.

SWPC’s obligations under the water transfer agreement will be guaranteed by a credit support agreement entered into by the Finance Ministry on behalf of the Saudi government.

The project is part of the kingdom’s National Water Strategy 2030, which aims to reduce the water demand-supply gap and ensure desalinated water accounts for 90% of national urban supply to reduce reliance on non-renewable ground sources.

Related read: SWPC focuses on desalination and sewage plants

MEED reported in March that the responsibility for procuring several water transmission pipeline projects in Saudi Arabia has been transferred from SWPC to the Water Transmission & Technologies Company (WTTCO), which has recently been renamed Water Transmission Company (WTCO). 

Earlier this week, WTCO invited companies to express interest in an upcoming tender to develop the Ras Mohaisen-Baha-Mecca independent water transmission system, which will have a contracted transmission capacity of 515,000 cubic metres a day, and extend approximately 300 kilometres.

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Jennifer Aguinaldo
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