Oman signs PPA for 125MW Dhofar 2 wind project
12 November 2025
Singapore's Sembcorp Utilities and local firm OQ Alternative Energy (OQAE) have won a contract to develop the 125MW Dhofar 2 wind independent power project in Oman.
The contract was awarded by state offtaker Nama Power & Water Procurement Company (Nama PWP) under a 20-year power purchase agreement (PPA).
Under the PPA, Sembcorp and OQAE will form a joint venture to build, own and operate the wind farm, which will supply power to Nama PWP once operational.
The equity split will give Sembcorp 75% and OQAE 25%, a source close to the project told MEED.
Nama PWP said that it will allocate a portion of contracted works for the Dhofar 2 project to Omani small and medium-sized enterprises under its in-country value programme.
The project is expected to begin commercial operations in the third quarter of 2027.
The facility, valued at about OR43m ($112m), will be located on a 12-square-kilometre site in Dhofar Governorate.
The project comprises 20 Windey WD200 turbines, each with a 6.25MW capacity. Each turbine stands 215 metres tall and will be connected to the national grid via a 400kV substation.
The development will provide clean electricity to more than 18,000 homes and will cut carbon dioxide emissions by about 158,000 tonnes a year.
It is also expected to generate about 396,754 megawatt-hours and free up around 76 million cubic metres of natural gas annually.
Sembcorp has over 1.1GW of energy assets in Oman. In September, the firm signed a new 10-year power and water purchase agreement with Nama PWP for its Salalah independent water and power plant.
According to Nama PWP, the offtaker has contracted 26 water and desalination plants, exceeding $11bn in investment, over the past 15 years.
Chief energy transition officer at Nama PWP, Abdullah Bin Rashid Al-Sawafi, said the company "plans to attract a further $5bn over the next five years, mainly in renewable energy and storage technologies".
This includes an extra 9GW of renewable energy capacity by 2030, representing 60% of total contracted capacity.
Oman aims to have 30% of its electricity generation from renewable sources by the same year.
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Mena players up the ante in global LNG production race; Investment takes UAE non-oil economy from strength to strength; Project finance activity draws international lenders back to market
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the November 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
|
> AGENDA 1: Gulf LNG sector enters a new prolific phase
> INDUSTRY REPORT 1: Region sees evolving project finance demand
> INDUSTRY REPORT 2: Iraq leads non-GCC project finance activity
> GREEN STEEL: Abu Dhabi takes the lead in green steel transition
> DIGITISATION: Riyadh-based organisation drives digital growth
> UAE MARKET FOCUS: Investment shapes UAE growth story
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Exclusive from Meed
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Oman signs PPA for 125MW Dhofar 2 wind project12 November 2025
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Construction completed for Shuqaiq 4 desalination plant11 November 2025
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Firms seek to prequalify for Oman waste-to-energy project10 November 2025
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Teams form for Riyadh stadium PPP10 November 2025
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Retal awards $259m Jubail residential construction deal10 November 2025
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Construction completed for Shuqaiq 4 desalination plant11 November 2025
Construction and commissioning works on Saudi Arabia's Shuqaiq 4 desalination plant have been completed, according to Spain's Acciona.
Located on the Red Sea coast, the seawater reverse osmosis facility has a capacity of 400,000 cubic metres a day (cm/d) and will provide potable water to about 3.5 million people.
The main contract for the project was awarded in 2021 by the Saline Water Conversion Corporation to a consortium of Acciona and local partner Al-Rashid Trading & Contracting.
The facility is located adjacent to the operational Shuqaiq 3 independent water project (IWP), a separate project and Saudi Arabia’s second IWP.
The main contract was awarded by Water & Electricity Company – which is now known as Saudi Water Partnership Company (SWPC) – in January 2019 to a team led by Japan’s Marubeni and the local Abdul Latif Jameel.
The consortium also comprises Acciona and the local Rawafid Al-Hadarah Holding Company.
Together, the two plants add nearly 850,000 cm/d of capacity to the national network, including Jizan, Asir and surrounding regions.
Additionally, SWPC is planning to undertake the construction of the Al-Shuqaiq 4 IWP, including a desalination facility with a capacity of 400,000 cm/d.
Almost 40 companies have submitted statements of qualifications. The main contract has yet to be tendered.
READ THE NOVEMBER 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDFMena players up the ante in global LNG production race; Investment takes UAE non-oil economy from strength to strength; Project finance activity draws international lenders back to market
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the November 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA 1: Gulf LNG sector enters a new prolific phase> INDUSTRY REPORT 1: Region sees evolving project finance demand> INDUSTRY REPORT 2: Iraq leads non-GCC project finance activity> GREEN STEEL: Abu Dhabi takes the lead in green steel transition> DIGITISATION: Riyadh-based organisation drives digital growth> UAE MARKET FOCUS: Investment shapes UAE growth storyTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15065225/main.jpg -
Firms seek to prequalify for Oman waste-to-energy project10 November 2025
Oman’s state offtaker Nama Power & Water Procurement (Nama PWP) has received 18 statements of qualification from international and local companies for the planned waste-to-energy (WTE) project in Barka, South Al-Batinah Governorate.
The project will be Oman’s first large-scale WTE facility, with a generation capacity of 95MW-100MW.
According to Nama PWP, the facility will be developed on a 190,000-square-metre site and is scheduled to reach commercial operation in the fourth quarter of 2030.
US/India-based Synergy Consulting is acting as financial adviser to Nama PWP for the project.
The plant is expected to contribute 757 gigawatt-hours of renewable energy annually and reduce carbon dioxide emissions by about 302,000 tonnes a year.
It will process up to 3,000 tonnes of municipal solid waste a day using grate incineration technology.
The following companies submitted statements of qualifications:
- Acwa Power (Saudi Arabia)
- Al-Ramooz National (Oman)
- Al-Tasnim Enterprise (Oman)
- Aspec for Contracting & Environmental Consultancy (Oman)
- China Communications Construction (China)
- China Everbright Environment Group (China)
- China Tianying (China)
- Eco Vision (Oman)
- Emirates Waste to Energy (UAE)
- Eternal Industrial Investment (China)
- FCC Medioambiente Internacional (Spain)
- Future Vision Engineering Services (Oman)
- Horsol Switz Engineering Asia (Singapore)
- Hunan Junxin (China)
- Itochu Corporation (Japan)
- Kanadevia Inova (Switzerland)
- Keppel Seghers Engineering Co (Singapore)
- Mohammed Abdulmohsin Al-Kharafi & Sons (Kuwait)
- NV Besix (Belgium/UAE)
- Oman National Engineering & Investment (Oman)
- Paprec Group (France)
- Satarem America (US)
- Seven Seas Petroleum (Oman)
- Shanghai Environment Group (China)
- Shanghai SUS Environment (China)
- Shenzhen Energy Group (China)
- Sinoma Energy Conservation (China)
- Suez International SAS (France/Oman branch)
- Veolia Middle East (France)
- Urbaser (Spain)
In August, MEED reported that Oman had finally moved to the prequalification phase following attempts to start work on the project to develop a WTE facility for several years.
In 2019, when it was known as Oman Power & Water Procurement Company, Nama PWP is understood to have started the process to appoint consultants for the project, based on an independent power producer model.
It later put the project on hold, only to revive the prequalification and procurement process, along with Oman Environmental Services Holding Company (Beah), in 2023.
Beah will supply the waste feedstock for the project, which is part of a long-term plan to convert municipal waste into energy and reduce landfill dependency, supporting Oman’s net-zero emissions target for 2050.
READ THE NOVEMBER 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDFMena players up the ante in global LNG production race; Investment takes UAE non-oil economy from strength to strength; Project finance activity draws international lenders back to market
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the November 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA 1: Gulf LNG sector enters a new prolific phase> INDUSTRY REPORT 1: Region sees evolving project finance demand> INDUSTRY REPORT 2: Iraq leads non-GCC project finance activity> GREEN STEEL: Abu Dhabi takes the lead in green steel transition> DIGITISATION: Riyadh-based organisation drives digital growth> UAE MARKET FOCUS: Investment shapes UAE growth storyTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15058075/main.jpg -
Teams form for Riyadh stadium PPP10 November 2025

At least four teams have formed joint ventures to bid for a contract to develop Prince Faisal Bin Fahd Stadium in Sports City, Riyadh.
Saudi Arabia’s Sports Ministry is developing the project in collaboration with the National Centre for Privatisation & PPP (NCP) and Riyadh Region Municipality.
MEED understands the teams that have been formed include:
- Albawani / Besix / Orascom (local/Belgium/Egypt)
- Lamar Holding / Shanxi Construction / Oakview Group (local/China/US)
- Algihaz Holding / Tekfen / China Harbour Engineering Company (local/Turkiye/China)
- Nesma & Partners / FCC Construction (local/Spain)
The project will be delivered as a public-private partnership (PPP) under a design, build, finance, operate and maintain model, with a contract duration of 20-30 years.
The clients issued the expressions of interest and request for qualifications notice in August, as MEED previously reported.
US-based EY-Parthenon is serving as the project’s lead financial adviser, while France's Egis is acting as technical adviser.
The project involves constructing a stadium in the northern section of King Abdullah Park in the Al-Malaz area of Riyadh.
The stadium will have a seating capacity of about 47,000 spectators.
It will host major domestic and international football events, including matches during the 2034 Fifa World Cup.
The scheme is the first of several stadiums expected to be delivered on a PPP basis in preparation for the 2034 Fifa World Cup in Saudi Arabia.
READ THE NOVEMBER 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDFMena players up the ante in global LNG production race; Investment takes UAE non-oil economy from strength to strength; Project finance activity draws international lenders back to market
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the November 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA 1: Gulf LNG sector enters a new prolific phase> INDUSTRY REPORT 1: Region sees evolving project finance demand> INDUSTRY REPORT 2: Iraq leads non-GCC project finance activity> GREEN STEEL: Abu Dhabi takes the lead in green steel transition> DIGITISATION: Riyadh-based organisation drives digital growth> UAE MARKET FOCUS: Investment shapes UAE growth storyTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15056645/main.jpg -
Retal awards $259m Jubail residential construction deal10 November 2025
Saudi private real estate developer Retal Urban Development Company (Retal) has awarded a SR972m ($259m) contract to its majority-owned contracting subsidiary, Building Construction Company (BCC).
The contract covers the design and construction of 901 residential units and the development of associated infrastructure works in Jubail Industrial City.
The contract duration is 40 months following the handover of the land to Retal.
In November 2023, Jubail & Yanbu Industrial Cities Services Company (Jabeen) and Retal signed a land transfer agreement worth SR1.2bn ($320m).
Retal has awarded major construction contracts to BCC recently. In March, Retal awarded a $131m contract to BCC for the construction of 371 residential units and associated infrastructure works in gigaproject developer Roshn’s Sedra housing community in Riyadh.
In January, Retal awarded another contract to BCC for the construction of 285 residential units in the Murcia zone of the Khuzam suburb of Riyadh.
The duration of this SR374m ($100m) contract is 2.5 years from the start of construction.
The construction work was slated to start immediately and the project is expected to be completed in 2027.
Prior to this, Retal awarded a SR240m ($64m) contract to BCC in April 2024 for the construction of eight residential buildings in Roshn’s Sedra community.
Retal was established in 2012 by the local Al-Fozan Holding Company to develop real estate projects in the kingdom.
Al-Fozan Holding Company also owns BCC, which is the contracting arm of the group.
READ THE NOVEMBER 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDFMena players up the ante in global LNG production race; Investment takes UAE non-oil economy from strength to strength; Project finance activity draws international lenders back to market
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the November 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
> AGENDA 1: Gulf LNG sector enters a new prolific phase> INDUSTRY REPORT 1: Region sees evolving project finance demand> INDUSTRY REPORT 2: Iraq leads non-GCC project finance activity> GREEN STEEL: Abu Dhabi takes the lead in green steel transition> DIGITISATION: Riyadh-based organisation drives digital growth> UAE MARKET FOCUS: Investment shapes UAE growth storyTo see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click herehttps://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15056579/main.png -
Lukoil deal collapse puts $1.8bn of Iraq projects at risk10 November 2025
Commentary
Wil Crisp
Oil & gas reporterThe collapse of Lukoil’s deal to sell its foreign assets to Swiss commodities trader Gunvor has increased uncertainty for Iraqi oil projects connected to the West Qurna 2 and Block 10 oil fields.
Lukoil holds a 75% stake in the West Qurna 2 oil field and an 80% stake in Iraq’s Block 10, which has an area of 5,800 square kilometres and is located 150 kilometres from the West Qurna 2 field.
Active projects in these two fields are currently worth around $1.8bn, according to regional project tracker MEED Projects.
One industry source said: “Currently, there is no clarity about what is going to happen at these fields, and Lukoil is quickly running out of time to find a way to work around sanctions issues.”
The US Treasury Department announced sanctions on Lukoil on 22 October, and companies are running out of time to stop trading with Lukoil, which is Russia’s second-largest oil company.
The US Treasury Department has issued a licence giving companies until 21 November to wind down any transactions.
The sanctions have already caused significant disruption to Lukoil’s operations in Iraq, as well as to the operations of its partners.
Earlier this month, Iraq's state-owned oil marketing firm Somo cancelled the loadings of three crude oil cargoes from the West Qurna 2 field.
The cargoes were due to load on 11 November, 18 November and 26 November.
One industry source told MEED: “Iraq is not in a position where it can violate these sanctions. It wants to do anything it can to avoid a negative reaction from the US and Donald Trump.”
Contractors that could be impacted by project disruption include Italy’s Sicim, which is executing projects at West Qurna 2, and China’s CPECC, which has design contracts in West Qurna 2 and Block 10.
Active projects
The active projects at the West Qurna 2 field include two projects that are currently under construction.
The first is a project to develop gas compression and dehydration facilities, which is worth $619m.
The second is the second phase of a project to develop water treatment and water injection facilities, which is worth $320m.
Both of the project contracts were awarded to Sicim in January 2023 and are due to be completed before the end of 2027.
Another West Qurna 2 project that could be impacted by the sanctions is the Yamama gathering system project, which is expected to be worth more than $400m.
Early design work is currently ongoing for this project and its scope is expected to include new well pads, wells and tie-ins to pilot wells.
Bids have already been submitted for another related project focused on the Yamama formation. The scope of this project includes well pads and roads and it has an estimated value of $15m.
Block 10
The sanctions on Lukoil could also disrupt a planned project to develop the Eridu oil field, which is located in the Block 10 concession.
Last month, Iraq’s Oil Minister, Hayyan Abdul Ghani Al-Sawad, held meetings with Lukoil and Japan’s Inpex to discuss the Eridu oil field development.
In a statement that was released in October, Iraq’s Oil Ministry said that Lukoil had received approval for the “Declaration of Commerciality” and the preliminary development plan for the Eridu project from state-owned Thi-Qar Oil Company (TOC).
The ministry estimated that production at the field could reach 250,000 barrels a day (b/d) of oil, with an estimated oil production in the first phase of 30,000 b/d expected to be achieved later this year.
The project to develop the Eridu oil field is estimated to be worth around $450m, according to MEED Projects.
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