Kuwait airport expansion to be completed before 2027
15 May 2025
Kuwait’s long-delayed $5.8bn project to develop a second terminal at the country’s international airport is on track to be completed before the end of 2026, according to industry sources.
One source said: “The project currently has good momentum and it should be completed before the start of 2027 if there are no significant problems.”
Project execution for the second terminal started in 2017, and the completion date has been pushed back from the initial completion date for the project, which would have seen it finished in 2022.
Earlier this month, Ahmad Al-Kreebani, the chief executive of state-owned Kuwait Airways, was fired and replaced by Abdulwahab Al-Shatti.
Al-Kreebani’s dismissal after two years in the job followed a decision by the country’s civil aviation authority to withdraw its approval for his leadership of the airline, according to news reports.
Over recent months, 14 airlines have exited from Kuwait International airport and suspended their operations in the country.
These airlines included British Airways, Lufthansa, Air France, KLM and Singapore Airlines.
These airlines continue to serve other Gulf hubs, such as Doha, Dubai and Riyadh, and have cited Kuwait’s economic unviability, substandard infrastructure and stagnant passenger growth as key reasons for their withdrawal.
The second terminal project consists of three packages.
These are:
- Package 1: Main works – $4,329m
- Package 2: Multistorey car park building, connection roads, bridges and landscaping works – $550m
- Package 3: Aircraft parking, runways and service buildings – $950m
Madrid-headquartered Ineco is executing package one.
The second and third packages are both being executed by Turkey’s Limak Holding.
Earlier this year, Ineco released a statement saying that the development would be “one of the most modern airport terminals in the world”.
It said the building’s triangular shape was “inspired by the sails of traditional dhows”, a type of Arabic sailing vessel, usually with slanting triangular sails, common in the Red Sea and Indian Ocean.
The company also said: “The aim of the Kuwait Airport … project is to enable the terminal to operate smoothly from day one.
“To do this, we have to get the basis (construction, systems, employees and operations) perfectly aligned.
“It is a challenge that requires the coordination of a large number of public bodies, consultants and contractors from different countries involved in the construction and future operation of the airport”.
Ineco has previously worked on airport projects in the Spanish cities of Madrid, Barcelona, Malaga, Valencia and Alicante.
It has also worked on airports in Abu Dhabi in the UAE and Newark in the US.
The terminal building was designed by Foster+Partners and Gulf Consult.
The scope of the main package includes the new terminal building, a building for the cooling and electricity supply facilities, a building for the water supply and the provision of the future Automatic People Mover (APM) connection to the satellite building.
The terminal building will be three times the size of the original building and will have 36 boarding gates.
Of the 36 gates, 30 will be contact gates and six will be for remote boarding.
The building will cover more than 700,000 square metres and have five floors, one of which will be underground.
It will have the capacity, at maximum service level, for 25 million passengers a year once the first phase has been completed and up to 50 million passengers after further phases are completed.
The second package of works includes a new car park with approximately 5,000 parking spaces, connected to the new passenger terminal.
It also includes all new access roads to the airport and landscaping.
The scope of the third package comprises the main platform, new taxiways and several tunnels, including one under platform between the terminal building and the future cargo area of the airport.
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PIF’s Humain and US chipmakers seal multibillion-dollar deals
15 May 2025
Humain, the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund (PIF)-owned artificial intelligence (AI) firm, has signed preliminary deals with US chipmakers AMD and Nvidia to build a multibillion-dollar advanced digital infrastructure in the kingdom.
The firms announced the deals on 13 May, coinciding with the first day of US President Donald Trump’s trip to the Gulf states.
AMD said it will invest up to $10bn to deploy 500MW of AI compute capacity in Saudi Arabia over the next five years.
According to AMD, the project entails building “the world’s most open, scalable, resilient and cost-efficient AI infrastructure, that will power the future of global intelligence through a network of AMD-based AI computing centres stretching from Saudi Arabia to the US”.
It added: “The AI superstructure built by AMD and Humain will be open by design, accessible at scale and optimised to power AI workloads across enterprise, start-up and sovereign markets.
“Humain will oversee end-to-end delivery, including [the construction of a] hyperscale data centre, sustainable power systems and global fiber interconnects, and AMD will provide the full spectrum of the AMD AI compute portfolio and the AMD ROCm open software ecosystem.”
The ROCm is an open software stack comprising drivers, development tools and application programming interfaces that enable graphic processing unit (GPU) programming from low-level kernel to end-user applications, according to AMD.
Similarly, GPU maker Nvidia agreed to develop a similar compute capacity to build “AI factories” in Saudi Arabia with a projected capacity of up to 500MW.
These will require “several hundred thousand” of Nvidia’s most advanced GPUs over the next five years.
The firm said the first phase of deployment will be an 18,000 Nvidia GB300 Grace Blackwell AI supercomputer with Nvidia InfiniBand networking.
“These hyperscale AI data centres will provide a secure foundational infrastructure for training and deploying sovereign AI models at scale, enabling industries across Saudi Arabia and worldwide to accelerate innovation and digital transformation,” the firm said.
The chosen platform is Nvidia Omniverse, which the firm describes as “a multi-tenant system to drive acceleration of the new era of physical AI and robotics through simulation, optimisation and operation of physical environments by new human-AI-led solutions”.
This will allow industries such as manufacturing, logistics and energy to create fully integrated digital twins, boosting efficiency, safety and sustainability while fast-tracking the kingdom’s journey toward Industry 4.0, it added.
The UAE and Nvidia, in particular, are expected to announce a deal over the next 24 hours for the supply of up to 1 million GPUs to the UAE, international media reports indicate.
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Oman awards $670m Adam-Thumrait road contracts
15 May 2025
Oman’s Ministry of Transport, Communications & Information Technology has awarded three contracts totalling over RO258m ($670m) for packages three, four and five of the Adam-Thumrait road dualisation project.
The contracts were awarded to joint ventures of local and Saudi-based firms.
The first contract covering the construction works on package three was awarded to a joint venture of local firm Sarooj Construction Company and Saudi Arabia’s Rawaf Contracting Company.
Package three covers a 132.5 kilometre-long stretch of highway connecting Haima with Maqshan. It includes the construction of roads with 16 detour lanes, an intersection for Maqshan and 19 side parking slots.
The second contract, covering package four, was awarded to Oman’s Galfar Engineering & Contracting and Saudi Arabia’s Alomaier Trading & Contracting Company.
Package four is 135km long and connects Maqshan to Dokah. The scope includes the construction of roads with 14 detour lanes and 27 side parking lots.
The third contract, covering the construction of package five, was awarded to the joint venture of Oman Gulf Company and Saudi Arabia’s Kom Al-Fahd Trading, Industry & Contracting Company.
وقعت الوزارة اليوم بإتلاف عُماني سعودي على 3 اتفاقيات لتنفيذ الأجزاء (الثالث والرابع والخامس) من ازدواجية طريق السلطان سعيد بن تيمور بطول إجمالي 400 كم
جاء ذلك في إطار جهود وزارة النقل والاتصالات وتقنية المعلومات المستمرة لتعزيز جودة وكفاءة البنية الأساسية للطرق✨ pic.twitter.com/iHPf7VZrRb
— وزارة النقل والاتصالات وتقنية المعلومات (@mtcitoman) May 13, 2025
In September last year, MEED reported that Oman’s Transport, Communications & Information Technology Ministry had opened bids for packages three, four and five of the Adam-Thumrait road dualisation project.
US-based Parsons is the consultant for the Adam-Thumrait road expansion project.
The ministry reissued the tender for the contracts on 22 June last year. The tender was open exclusively for Saudi-Omani joint ventures.
The contracts were first tendered in 2019 and later cancelled.
The project links Muscat and Salalah via a fully dualised road. It will also upgrade the existing single carriageway between Adam and Thumrait to a four-lane carriageway.
The 717.5km-long highway project is divided into five packages.
Packages one and two were completed in 2019. UAE-based Ghantoot Transport & General Contracting Company was the contractor for package one. Lebanon-based Consolidated Contractors Company (CCC) was the contractor for package two.
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US and Qatar sign wide-reaching strategic deals
15 May 2025
During US President Donald Trump’s trip to Doha, the US and Qatar signed a series of high-value agreements spanning aviation, defence and other technologies, deepening economic and strategic ties between the two nations.
Headlining the visit was a landmark aircraft order by Qatar Airways for up to 210 Boeing aircraft – including the 787 Dreamliner and the 777X models – to be delivered over the next seven years.
Qatar Airways group CEO Badr Mohammed Al-Meer hailed the deal as a “critical next step” for the airline, praising its existing Boeing fleet and stating that the new order would deliver the “cleanest, youngest and most efficient fleet in global aviation”.
The White House valued the deal at approximately $96bn, though Trump quoted figures as high as $200bn during the announcement. Either way, it marks the single largest order for Boeing’s 787 series to date and will provide much-needed support for the US firm’s ailing share price.
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Saudi Arabia prepares to tender 9GW of thermal capacity
15 May 2025
Saudi Arabia’s main utility firm, Saudi Electricity Company (SEC), and the principal buyer, Saudi Power Procurement Company (SPPC), plan to tender the contracts to build and develop, respectively, combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT) power generation plants before the end of the year.
According to industry sources, SEC is expected to invite engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractors to bid for a CCGT power generation plant in Shoaibah, while SPPC could start prequalifying bidders for a gas-fired independent power plant (IPP) located in Shuqaiq or Dawadmi.
One of the sources said the total capacity being considered is 9GW.
It is unclear if the SPPC will split the Dawadmi IPP into two contracts, similar to the four IPP schemes it awarded in 2023 and 2024, where each scheme was divided into two packages.
The project is part of the massive capacity buildout in Saudi Arabia as the kingdom implements its liquid fuel displacement programme by 2030 and aims for renewable energy to account for 50% of its total installed generation capacity by the end of the decade.
The SPPC awarded eight gas-fired IPP contracts with a total capacity of 14.4GW between 2023 and 2024.
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New Murabba seeks consortiums for Mukaab project
15 May 2025
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Saudi Arabia’s New Murabba Development Company (NMDC) has asked companies to prequalify for a contract that requires them to form consortiums to execute the main works for the Mukaab at the New Murabba downtown development in Riyadh.
The notice was issued on 5 May with an initial submission deadline of 12 June.
The Mukaab is a Najdi-inspired landmark that will be one of the largest buildings in the world. It will be 400 metres high, 400 metres wide and 400 metres long.
Internally, it will have a tower on top of a spiral base and a structure featuring 2 million square metres (sq m) of floor space designated for hospitality. It will feature commercial spaces, cultural and tourist attractions, and residential and hotel units, as well as recreational facilities.
Earlier this month, MEED exclusively reported that NMDC was prequalifying firms for three new contracts covering the construction works on the Mukaab at the New Murabba downtown development in Riyadh.
MEED understands that the three packages comprise the Central Core Tower, Outriggers and Vertical Ribs, and could cost up to SR10bn ($2.6bn).
Downtown destination
The New Murabba destination will have a total floor area of more than 25 million sq m and feature more than 104,000 residential units, 9,000 hotel rooms and over 980,000 sq m of retail space.
The scheme will include 1.4 million sq m of office space, 620,000 sq m of leisure facilities and 1.8 million sq m of space dedicated to community facilities.
The project will be developed around the concept of sustainability and will include green spaces and walking and cycling paths to promote healthy, active lifestyles and community activities.
Living, working and entertainment facilities will be created within a 15-minute walking radius. The area will use an internal transport system and be about a 20-minute drive from the airport.
The downtown area will feature a museum, a technology and design university, an immersive, multipurpose theatre, and more than 80 entertainment and cultural venues.
MEED’s latest report on Saudi Arabia includes:
> GOVERNMENT: Riyadh takes the diplomatic initiative
> ECONOMY: Saudi Arabia’s non-oil economy forges onward
> BANKING: Saudi banks work to keep pace with credit expansion
> UPSTREAM: Saudi oil and gas spending to surpass 2024 level
> DOWNSTREAM: Aramco’s recalibrated chemical goals reflect realism
> POWER: Saudi power sector enters busiest year
> WATER: Saudi water contracts set another annual record
> CONSTRUCTION: Reprioritisation underpins Saudi construction
> TRANSPORT: Riyadh pushes ahead with infrastructure development
> DATABANK: Saudi Arabia’s growth trend heads uphttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/13885914/main.jpg