Bidders get more time for Riyadh East sewage treatment plant

16 March 2026

 

State water offtaker Sharakat, formerly Saudi Water Partnership Company (SWPC), has extended the bid submission deadline for the Riyadh East independent sewage treatment plant (ISTP).

The new deadline is 30 June. The original deadline was 2 April.

The project will be developed under a build‑own‑operate‑transfer (BOOT) model with a 25‑year concession term.

The plant will have a treatment capacity of 200,000 cubic metres a day (cm/d) in its first phase, expanding to 500,000 cm/d in the second phase.

It includes the development of a treated sewage effluent transmission pipeline, forming part of the kingdom’s wider programme to expand wastewater treatment capacity through public-private partnerships.

The request for proposals (RFP) was issued last October. 

In 2024, Sharakat prequalified 53 companies that could bid for the Riyadh East ISTP, part of seven planned ISTP projects it said it would procure between 2024 and 2026

WSP is the technical adviser and KPMG Middle East is the lead and financial adviser on the project.

The targeted commercial operation date for the facility is 2029.

ISTP plans

Sharakat’s current ISTP portfolio includes 10 large plants that are operational, under construction or under tendering, with a combined initial treatment capacity of 1.79 million cm/d.

These projects include North Taif, Jeddah Airport, West Dammam, Madinah 3, Buraydah 2, Tabuk 2, Al-Haer, Arana, Hadda and Riyadh East. 

In December, two consortiums were selected for contracts to develop and operate the Hadda and Arana ISTP projects in Mecca province.

That same month, Sharakat prequalified 63 developers for upcoming ISTP projects under a revised prequalification process.

According to Sharakat’s newly released seven-year statement, it has identified six additional large ISTPs in the development pipeline.

These include:

  • Kharj (75,000 cm/d)
  • Abu Arish (50,000)
  • Hafar Al-Batin (100,000)
  • Riyadh North (TBD)
  • Najran South (50,000)
  • Khamis Mushait (50,000)

The company is also pursuing a nationwide small sewage treatment plant programme covering about 139 smaller ISTPs grouped into seven clusters.

These are designed to add roughly 521,450 cm/d of additional treatment capacity across the kingdom.


READ THE MARCH 2026 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDF

Riyadh urges private sector to take greater role; Chemical players look to spend rationally; Economic uptick lends confidence to Cairo’s reforms.

Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the March 2026 edition of MEED Business Review includes:

To see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click here
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Mark Dowdall
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