Serco wins Dubai Airports contract extension
18 June 2025
UK-based Serco has secured a AED495m ($135m) contract extension with Dubai Airports Company that will run until December 2030.
Under the terms of the agreement, Serco will continue to deliver guest experience services across all aspects of the passenger journey at both Dubai International airport (DXB) and Dubai World Central – Al-Maktoum International (DWC). The services include the deployment of guest experience ambassadors, passenger processing teams, traffic marshals, buggy drivers, chauffeurs and lounge hosts for VIP services.
Currently, more than 1,500 Serco employees are stationed at the airports, facilitating the movement of over 93 million passengers annually.
The five-year extension builds on a six-year partnership, with an initial five-year term and a subsequent one-year extension.
In 2020, MEED reported that Serco had won the contract to deliver hospitality and passenger processing services at DXB and DWC.
That contract required 1,000 employees to be on the ground to deliver the contract over the following five years, Serco said in a statement at the time.
In 2016, MEED reported that Dubai Airports Company had awarded Serco Middle East a six-year facilities management contract for Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 at DXB, as well as for other cargo and ancillary buildings.
Exclusive from Meed
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Oman tenders three major distribution deals
19 June 2025
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Kharafi wins Egypt wastewater deal
19 June 2025
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Oman receives dams funding
18 June 2025
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Serco wins Dubai Airports contract extension
18 June 2025
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Oman tenders three major distribution deals
19 June 2025
Oman Electricity Transmission Company (OETC) has tendered three significant contracts to build new substations in the sultanate.
The first contract, estimated at about $100m, covers the construction of the Majan 400/220/132kV grid station along with an associated 400kV line-in line-out underground cable from Sohar Free Zone to the Sohar Interconnector Station.
The second deal, worth about $35m, covers the construction of the Sultan Haitham City 132/33kV grid station and associated 132kV line-in line-out underground cables running 4 kilometres from Mabella to Mabella Industrial Zone.
The bid submission deadline for both tenders is 3 July.
A tender deadline of 1 July has been set for the construction of the Surab 400/33kV grid station and an associated 400kV line-in line-out cable from the Duqm grid station to the Mahout grid station. Like the Majan substation, the Surab facility has an estimated contract value of about $100m.
In addition, OETC, part of the government-owned Nama Group, is evaluating bids for a number of other major substation construction tenders. These include:
- The 400kV Ras Madraka wind farm grid station
- The 132kV Sadah wind farm grid station
- The 400/132kV Wadi Latham grid station
China Energy Engineering Group Shanxi Electric Power Construction Company recently won the deal to upgrade the 220/132kV Sohar Free Zone grid station, while Oman National Engineering & Investment Company won a contract to build the Mahadha 220kV substation.
In 2024, OETC awarded more than $1.2bn worth of transmission and distribution work. Major signed contracts included:
READ THE JUNE 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDF
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Kharafi wins Egypt wastewater deal
19 June 2025
Kuwaiti contractor Mohamed Abdulmohsin Al-Kharafi & Sons has won a €69m ($79m) contract to design and build a new wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in Tanta with a capacity of 100,000 cubic metres a day (cm/d).
Four other international and local contractors bid for the 30-month contract tendered by Gharbia Company for Water & Wastewater.
The aim of the project is to have an installed flow rate of 100,000 cm/d by 2037, expanded under a later phase to 150,000 cm/d by 2057.
The scheme is a core component of the $730m Kitchener Drain Depollution project funded by the European Investment Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction & Development.
The programme’s aim is to depollute the Kitchener Drain, also called the Main Gharbia Drain, one of the main agricultural drains in the Nile delta. Some 69 kilometres long, the drain is the main source of irrigation water for about 193,000 hectares of agricultural land.
However, it is highly polluted due to poorly or untreated domestic wastewater discharge; uncontrolled municipal solid waste disposal into and along the banks of the drain; industrial wastewater discharges; and agricultural runoff.
Other significant projects under the programme include a $28m contract awarded in March 2024 to rehabilitate the Umm Tahoun, Arbaeen and Al-Suyah canals; a separate $40m deal to rehabilitate bridges across the drain and depollute the Beshbish, Sanbara and Shemy canals; and an estimated $70m contract to build new mechanical and biological treatment facilities with total capacity of 1,800 tonnes a day in the city of Defra, for which tender evaluation is under way.
Tanta is one of many WWTP projects tendered or awarded in Egypt over the past five years. Recently, a general procurement notice was issued for the fourth-phase design-build expansion of the giant Abu Rawash WWTP in Giza, while in late May, a grouping of the local Hassan Allam Construction and UAE-headquartered Metito won an estimated $200m contract to upgrade and expand the Alexandria West WWTP.
The world’s largest WWTP, the 7.5 million cm/d New Delta Irrigation plant, was completed in 2023. It was preceded by the 5 million cm/d Bahr El-Baqr facility commissioned two years earlier.
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Oman receives dams funding
18 June 2025
The Islamic Development Bank (ISDB) has extended a $632m loan to the Ministry of Agricultural, Fisheries Wealth & Water Resources to fund the construction of four major flood protection dams in the sultanate.
The dam projects are:
- The Wadi Al-Khoud Flood Protection Dam (AK01) in Seeb
- The Wadi Rijma Flood Protection Dam (R2A) in Liwa
- The Wadi Majlas Flood Protection Dam in Qurayat
- The Wadi Ahin Flood Protection Dam in Saham North
Each of the dam schemes will be open to bids from both local and international contractors, although it is unclear at this stage when the tenders will be issued.
Separately, contractors are preparing to submit technical and commercial bids by 23 June for the ISDB-funded project to build two flood protection dams at Wadi Al-Ansab, called ANS-02 and ANS-03.
The estimated $80m contract involves the following scope of work for each dam:
- An embankment dam with geomembrane sealing at the upstream face
- A plinth at the upstream toe of the dam and plastic concrete cut-off wall at the foundation
- Curtain/consolidation/contact grouting works along the cut-off wall, plinth at the abutments, spillway ogee structure and bottom outlet
- A reinforced concrete spillway located at the left abutment and composed of approach channel, crest, chute and tailwater channel slabs and walls
- Shotcrete and slope stabilisation works for open excavations
- Bottom outlet system with intake tower, conduit, energy dissipation basin and access bridge to the intake tower
- Bottom outlet control gates
- Dam monitoring system
- Restitution works at the reservoir area
- Providing electricity supply for operation of the gates
- Access road, fencing and access gates
Potential bidders include:
- Strabag Oman
- Arab Contractors (Egypt)
- Serka Taahhut Insaat (Turkiye)
- Khimji Ramdas (local)
- Galfar (local)
- Sarooj Construction Company (local)
- Al-Jafar Contracting Company (Jordan)
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Contractors submit prices for QatarEnergy NGL train project
18 June 2025
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Contractors have submitted commercial bids to QatarEnergy for a project to add a fifth natural gas liquids (NGL) train at its NGL complex in Qatar’s Mesaieed Industrial City.
The objective of the project, which is estimated to be worth $2.5bn, is to build a fifth NGL train (NGL-5) with the capacity to process up to 350 million cubic feet a day of rich associated gas from QatarEnergy’s offshore and onshore oil fields.
Contractors submitted commercial bids for engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) works on the NGL-5 project by the deadline of 15 June, according to sources.
The following contractors are understood to be participating in the project’s main contract tendering process:
- CTCI Corporation (Taiwan)
- Larsen & Toubro Energy Hydrocarbon (India)
- McDermott (US)
- Saipem (Italy)
- Samsung E&A (South Korea)
- Tecnicas Reunidas (Spain)
- Tecnimont (Italy)
QatarEnergy initially set a deadline of the end of May for the submission of prices for the project.
MEED previously reported that QatarEnergy had received technical bids for the project from contractors by the deadline of 13 April.
QatarEnergy issued the expression of interest (EoI) document for the NGL-5 project in early June of last year, with contractors submitting responses by 24 June 2024, MEED previously reported.
QatarEnergy eventually issued the main EPC tender for the NGL-5 project in November 2024.
In the EoI document, QatarEnergy said that it had begun site preparation works for the project in the fourth quarter of 2023 and expected work to be completed in the first quarter of 2025.
Turkish contractor Iris Insaat is performing site preparation work on the project, according to regional projects tracker MEED Projects.
QatarEnergy intends to start operations at the NGL-5 facility by the second quarter of 2028.
Project scope
Associated gas from the PS1, PS2 and PS3 offshore fields and the Dukhan onshore field is processed at existing facilities in the NGL complex at Mesaieed – the FSP, NGL-1 and Qapco ERU units.
The planned NGL-5 facility will replace these three units at the Mesaieed complex and process gas from the PS1, PS2 and Dukhan fields.
The scope of work on the project involves EPC work on units for the following functions:
- Feed gas compression
- Slug handling
- Gas sweetening
- Dehydration
- Mercury removal
- NGL fractionation
- NGL recovery
- Product treatment
- Propane refrigeration
- Acid gas enrichment
- Sulphur recovery
- Anti-flaring
- Utilities
- Boil-off gas recovery
- Drains and collection networks
- Effluent water treatment plant
- Carbon dioxide treatment and sequestration/ export
- Brownfield modifications
- Product rundown pipelines
QatarEnergy is understood to have divided the scope of work on the NGL-5 project into five EPC packages.
ALSO READ: QatarEnergy receives bids for new NGL train project
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Egypt proceeds with wastewater work
18 June 2025
Egypt’s Ministry of Housing, Utilities & Urban Communities, through the Construction Authority for Potable Water & Wastewater, has announced a general procurement notice for the fourth-phase design-build expansion of the giant Abu Rawash wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in Giza.
No official timeline has been given by the client for the issue of the request for proposals (RFP) for the project, but the tentative date for construction start is January 2026, with completion scheduled for June 2030.
The scheme has an official budget allocation of about €136m ($157m) and involves expanding the existing 1.6 million cubic-metre-a-day (cm/d) Abu Rawash plant with a further 400,000 cm/d of treatment capacity.
The additional capacity will be treated up to secondary treatment, with the treated wastewater discharged into the Barakat drainage system and then onto the Nile before entering the Mediterranean. By doing so, the irrigated land area will increase by about 29,000 acres, benefitting some 2 million people.
Abu Rawash is one of the world’s largest wastewater treatment complexes. Its 400,000 cm/d first phase was built in 1992. It was followed by phase 2 with a total capacity of 800,000 cm/d of primary-level treatment in 2010, before being upgraded to secondary treatment and expanded by 400,000 cm/d in 2022.
The latest expansion is being funded to the tune of €50m by the African Development Bank, with the remainder financed by the state.
In late May, a grouping of the local Hassan Allam Construction and UAE-headquartered Metito won an estimated $200m contract to upgrade and expand the Alexandria West WWTP.
Egypt is home to the world’s largest WWTP, the 7.5 million cm/d New Delta Irrigation plant completed in 2023, as well as the 5 million cm/d Bahr El-Baqr facility commissioned two years earlier.
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