Work progresses on multiple industrial city projects
10 June 2025
The Royal Commission for Jubail & Yanbu (RCJY) has awarded a number of large contracts totalling more than $337m over the past six months for the expansion and modernisation of infrastructure across three of its industrial cities.
Awarded to local contractors, the contracts are:
In Jubail
- Construction of education facilities to accommodate 18,000 students and 1,500 teaching and support services staff; awarded to Al-Rajhi Building & Construction for SR331.9m ($89.7m)
- Completion of six student dormitory buildings at Jubail Industrial College; awarded to Shar Company for SR316.4m
- Development of basic facilities in the Mardouma neighbourhood, covering roads, potable water, treated wastewater, sewage and drainage networks, and a water transmission pipeline; awarded to Mofarreh Al-Harbi for SR127.8m
In Yanbu
- The third phase of construction of seven residential buildings in Al-Aziziyah 1A; awarded to Samman Construction for SR63.3m
In Ras Al-Khair
- Extensive road works comprising the construction of a 2-kilometre section of the East-West Road, an additional lane on the East-West Road 10, new intersections along Highways 415 and 422, site preparation works, two conveyor culverts and street lighting facilities; awarded to Rashid Contracting Establishment for SR204.4m
- Construction of the Western Ras Al-Khair Road connecting the naval base with the entrance to Ras Al-Khair industrial city; awarded to Mofarreh Al-Harbi for SR204.2
- Development of the water evacuation area covering site preparation, secondary infrastructure, road works, and a stormwater and flood drainage network; awarded to Mofarreh Al-Harbi for SR51m
- The development of site area development B phase three, covering the basic infrastructure works over an area of 1,430 hectares; awarded to Mofarreh Al-Harbi for SR90m
- The repair and rehabilitation of Highway 7; awarded to Technical Development Contracting Company for SR68.7m
Saudi Arabia’s industrial cities remain the backbone of the kingdom’s manufacturing base, accommodating critical hydrocarbons export facilities and associated downstream processing facilities.
Investing in basic infrastructure such as roads, drainage networks and accommodation units is therefore considered essential for Riyadh’s plans to attract industrial investment and expand its non-oil manufacturing output.
READ THE JUNE 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDF
Gulf accelerates AI and data centre strategy; Baghdad keeps up project spending, but fiscal clouds gather; Banking stocks rise despite lower global oil prices
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the June 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA 1: Data centres churn investments
> AGENDA 2: Gulf seizes AI opportunities
> MEED TOP 100: Middle East stocks defy lower oil prices
> SAUDI ARABIA: Riyadh confirms capital expenditure cuts
> INTERVIEW: Mena crucial to Veolia’s growth plan
> GULF PROJECTS INDEX: Gulf projects index leaps 4.3%
> CONTRACT AWARDS: Region sees third month of weak awards activity
> ECONOMIC DATA: Data drives regional projects
> OPINION: Dealmaking trumps the Truman Doctrine
|
Exclusive from Meed
-
US Army awards more regional work
12 June 2025
-
WEBINAR: Saudi Gigaprojects 2025
12 June 2025
-
Dubai utility proceeds with multiple projects
12 June 2025
-
Prequalification finalised on Morocco road project
12 June 2025
-
Iraq studies Asian refinery projects
12 June 2025
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
- 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

Related Articles
-
US Army awards more regional work
12 June 2025
The US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Middle East District has awarded an indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity (IDIQ) task order contract to a US joint venture of Parsons and Versar.
Under the terms of the three-year contract, which is worth up to $75m, the group will provide general architect and engineering construction phase support services across the region.
Typically, such contracts cover services such as onsite quality assurance and oversight of construction supervision, review of construction project submittals, laboratory testing of construction materials and responses to construction requests for information.
The contract is the third major deal awarded by the USACE Middle East District this year. In February, it awarded a $48m contract to Kuwait’s Arabi Company for the maintenance and support of the Kuwaiti Ministry of Defence infrastructure and military platforms.
Earlier the same month, it awarded a $29m contract to the US’ MVL Builders for the first phase rebuild of the Beirut naval base.
P-563 programme
The IDIQ contract is the latest in a series of similar active contracts covering the region. The largest, awarded to a single firm, was the $290m task order to Spain’s Typsa covering the programme management of the Saudi Ministry of Defence’s (MoD) P-563 programme.
Located to the northwest of Riyadh, the P-563 programme includes the development of facilities and infrastructure to support the overall MoD initiatives developed as part of the kingdom's Vision 2030 strategy.
It covers the construction of:
- A new military city with MoD headquarters; consolidation, support and logistics facilities; a residential and commercial community; and other future commands
- A National Defence University with a library, conference centre and academic buildings
- A self-sustaining Joint Forces Command compound located approximately 50 kilometres from the military city
IDIQ contracts
Under the programme, IDIQ contracts totalling up to $700m have been awarded for various design services to US architectural firms HOK, SOM, Gensler, Jacobs, Scott Brownrigg and the US office of Canada’s WSP.
The latter, with support from the US’ Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture, is currently handling the design of the MoD’s headquarters under a contract worth about $72m. The iconic building, which has an estimated value of $9.8bn, will serve as the Mod's primary office, providing working space for about 13,500 staff.
It will be the central component of the new military city, which itself has an estimated development value of $7.1bn, supporting some 25,000 military personnel. The Saudi Arabia National Defence University (Sandu) will be built to the south of the military city and has an estimated construction cost of about $2.4bn.
The development cost of the Joint Forces Command compound is estimated at $1.2bn.
On the construction side, the largest deal, worth up to $900m, covers the development of facilities to support the installation and operations of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) platform in Saudi Arabia, with five local contractors in the IDIQ pool.
Another large IDIQ contract, worth up to $449m, covers the expansion and upgrade of various military facilities across the kingdom. Four Turkish, US, Kuwaiti and Greek contractors are in the pool.
The US has about $3.5bn-worth of foreign military sales construction and maintenance contacts active in the region. Going forward, it is planning 60 projects with a total potential value of about $7.9bn.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/14060088/main.gif -
WEBINAR: Saudi Gigaprojects 2025
12 June 2025
Date & Time: Wednesday 25 June 2025 | 11:00 AM GST
Agenda:
1. Latest update on the gigaprojects programme and the Saudi projects market in general, with full data analysis of the first five months of 2025
2. Assessment of recent managerial changes on some gigaprojects plus insight on the ‘pause’ in gigaprojects spending last year and its impact
3. Analysis on the latest contracts and spending up to the end of May 2025
4. Highlights of key contracts to be awarded over the next six months
Autodesk will further explore how technology is transforming the delivery of giga-scale developments – from early concept through design, construction and final handover. This session will highlight how digital workflows, collaboration platforms and data-driven processes are enabling faster decision-making, improving coordination and streamlining execution.
1. Biggest challenges facing the projects market over the next five years
2. The role of digital transformation and artificial intelligence and how they help project delivery
3. Best approach for workflows with digital products with regard to industrialised construction
4. How digital products improve sustainability efforts
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/14059131/main.gif -
Dubai utility proceeds with multiple projects
12 June 2025
Dubai Electricity & Water Authority (Dewa) is pressing ahead with a number of significant tenders, expected to total more than $300m, aimed at enhancing and expanding the emirate’s power and water infrastructure.
The first scheme, the bids for which are due to be submitted by 18 June, covers the supply and installation of cables at nine 132-kV substations.
A day later, bids will be submitted for the first of two major contracts to supply and install glass-reinforced epoxy water transmission pipelines across Dubai. Offers for the second contract are due on 17 July.
A fourth tender is for the construction of a new water reservoir of 45 million imperial gallons in Jebel Ali, with bids due on 10 July.
Finally, prices will be submitted by 7 August for the contract to build the ABRJSATW, ESKNKWNJ, MDNTAWIR, MDNTLTF MRKZMALI, ORCHIDST, DANAROAD and HORIZON 132/11-kV substations.
Data from MEED Projects highlights that Dewa awarded $1.52bn-worth of work on electricity transmission and distribution and water storage and distribution projects in 2024.
READ THE JUNE 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDF
Gulf accelerates AI and data centre strategy; Baghdad keeps up project spending, but fiscal clouds gather; Banking stocks rise despite lower global oil prices
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the June 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA 1: Data centres churn investments> AGENDA 2: Gulf seizes AI opportunities> MEED TOP 100: Middle East stocks defy lower oil prices> SAUDI ARABIA: Riyadh confirms capital expenditure cuts> INTERVIEW: Mena crucial to Veolia’s growth plan> GULF PROJECTS INDEX: Gulf projects index leaps 4.3%> CONTRACT AWARDS: Region sees third month of weak awards activity> ECONOMIC DATA: Data drives regional projects> OPINION: Dealmaking trumps the Truman DoctrineTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/14058669/main.gif -
Prequalification finalised on Morocco road project
12 June 2025
Morocco’s Equipment, Transport & Logistics Ministry has prequalified a number of Chinese and local firms for the three lots of the 40-kilometre (km) section two of the Guercif to Nador highway between Saka and Driouch.
The prequalified contractors are:
Lot 1:
- Mojazine Groupe (Morocco)
- Les Grands Travaux Routiers (GTR – Morocco)
- NGE Contracting/Capep (both local)
- China Road & Bridge Corporation (CRBC)
Lot 2:
- Mojazine Groupe
- GTR
- NGE Contracting with Capep
- CRBC
- SSMT (Morocco)
- China International Water & Electric Corporation/FHCC (China/Morocco)
- Societe Bioui Travaux (SBTX – Morocco)
- Societe Generale des Travaux du Maroc/Sinohydro Bureau 5 (Morocco/China)
- Staport (Morocco)
Lot 3:
- SBTX
- CRBC
- GTR
- Mojazine Group
- China International Water & Electric Corporation/ FHCC
Two contractors – China Railway Construction Engineering Group and the local Enterprise Houar – failed to be prequalified.
The 104km Guercif to Nador highway is being implemented in three sections. Prequalification for section 1 from Guercif to Saka was completed in late March.
The estimated $700m project, partly funded by the African Development Bank, is part of the kingdom’s plans to upgrade its public infrastructure in preparation for co-hosting the 2030 Fifa World Cup alongside Portugal and Spain. The programme includes the expansion of over 1,000km of highways.
In May, Societe Nationale des Autoroutes du Maroc awarded MD5bn ($540m) of contracts for nine packages covering construction works on the Rabat-Casablanca continental expressway.
READ THE JUNE 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDF
Gulf accelerates AI and data centre strategy; Baghdad keeps up project spending, but fiscal clouds gather; Banking stocks rise despite lower global oil prices
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the June 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA 1: Data centres churn investments> AGENDA 2: Gulf seizes AI opportunities> MEED TOP 100: Middle East stocks defy lower oil prices> SAUDI ARABIA: Riyadh confirms capital expenditure cuts> INTERVIEW: Mena crucial to Veolia’s growth plan> GULF PROJECTS INDEX: Gulf projects index leaps 4.3%> CONTRACT AWARDS: Region sees third month of weak awards activity> ECONOMIC DATA: Data drives regional projects> OPINION: Dealmaking trumps the Truman DoctrineTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/14058352/main.gif -
Iraq studies Asian refinery projects
12 June 2025
Iraq is studying investments in oil refineries in China, India and other Asian countries, where the majority of the country’s crude oil is exported, according to Iraqi government adviser Hatim Al-Fadli.
Al-Fadli said that a study into possible projects will begin in the coming months, followed by discussions with potential partners in 2025-26.
The initiative will include high-capacity oil refineries, allowing Iraq to export more crude oil and increase income, Al-Fadli told Al-Sumeria News.
Asian markets received about 75% of Iraq’s 1.2 billion barrels of oil exports in 2024, generating more than $95bn for the country.
The research will look into refining investments specifically in China, India, South Korea, Vietnam and Indonesia.
Iraq chose this group of countries because of their growing energy consumption and large populations, according to Al-Fadli.
He added that negotiations with possible partners in those countries might lead to agreements between 2026 and 2027, with projects including investments in existing refineries and the development of new ones.
Iraq has seen renewed interest in its oil and gas sector over recent years.
In May, MEED revealed that the total value of all oil, gas and chemicals projects in Iraq has hit its highest level in a decade as international oil companies increased investments in the country’s assets.
On 6 May, the total value of projects within these sectors that have been announced as planned or already under execution hit $152.2bn, according to information gathered by regional projects tracker MEED Projects.
The total value of oil, gas and chemicals projects in the country has risen by 15.6% since the same time last year, when it stood at $131.7bn. The value of projects under execution has also hit an all-time high of $93.3bn.
MEED’s June 2025 report on Iraq includes:
> COMMENT: Iraq maintains its pace, for now
> GOVERNMENT & ECONOMY: Iraq’s economy faces brewing storm
> OIL & GAS: Iraqi energy project value hits decade-high level
> PIPELINES: Revival of Syrian oil export route could benefit Iraq
> POWER: Iraq power sector turns a page
> CONSTRUCTION: Iraq pours billions into housing and infrastructure projects
> DATABANK: Iraq forecast dips on lower oil priceshttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/14053849/main.jpg