Mena region sports in focus
25 November 2022
Region pitches to be global sporting hub
Sport will continue to play an important role in the social and economic development of the region
The Middle East will be thrust firmly onto the global stage on 20 November when football’s 2022 World Cup kicks off in Qatar.
The month-long tournament, held every four years, is the world’s most-watched single event. Football’s governing body Fifa expects this year’s event to set new records with 5 billion people tuning in, up from 3.57 billion for the 2018 edition, which Russia hosted.
The tournament in Qatar will further cement the Middle East’s position as a global sporting hub. Over the past two decades, the region has hosted leading events for sports including athletics, golf, motorsports, boxing and martial arts, swimming, football, cricket and an old regional favourite, horse racing.
More is coming. In late 2019, the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) selected Doha and Riyadh to host upcoming editions of the Asian Games. Doha was chosen to hold the games for a second time and will host the event in 2030. The first time the games took place in the Qatari capital was in 2006.
Riyadh will host the games four years later, in 2034. Then, on 4 October this year, the Trojena mountain resort being developed at Neom in the northwest of Saudi Arabia was selected to host the 2029 Asian Winter Games. Read more
Click here to enjoy the November 2022 edition of MEED Business Review.
This package on the region's sporting ambitions includes:
> MEED BUSINESS REVIEW | Global venue
> COVER STORY | Region pitches to be global sporting hub
> TROJENA | Saudi winter games challenges perceptions
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Climate, construction and the environment are all challenges that lie ahead for Saudi Arabia's 2029 Asian Winter Games, writes MEED editor Colin Foreman. Read more |
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Qatar heads for a growth surge in 20263 February 2026
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Qatar’s strategy falls into place3 February 2026
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Aldar acquires land for upcoming developments in Abu Dhabi3 February 2026
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Saudi’s Ceer awards automotive supplier park deal3 February 2026
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Morocco awards $482m phosphate mine works contract3 February 2026
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Qatar heads for a growth surge in 20263 February 2026

MEED’s February 2026 report on Qatar includes:
> COMMENT: Qatar’s strategy falls into place
> GVT & ECONOMY: Qatar enters 2026 with heady expectations
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Qatar’s strategy falls into place3 February 2026
Commentary
John Bambridge
Analysis editorQatar enters 2026 with a rare sense of momentum and confidence, underpinned by the most optimistic growth outlook anywhere in the GCC. With the IMF forecasting real GDP growth of 6.1%, Doha is not just set to improve markedly on its 2.9% expansion in 2025, but to break clear of its regional peers.
Nor is this dynamic a surprise, so much as one rooted in unusually well-aligned fundamentals. Global gas markets have turned decisively in Doha’s favour, with demand growth resuming in 2024 and strengthening through 2025. Natural gas prices have held up far better than crude and are being buoyed by surging energy demand. Yet all of this only complements the long-term planning of QatarEnergy, which locked in the next phase of the country’s hydrocarbons strategy back in 2021. Doha’s spending of a further $20bn on energy infrastructure in 2025 merely underscored its existing strategy.
Developments are also looking bullish in Doha’s non-hydrocarbon economy. Total project awards across all sectors in the past five years have swollen the value of work under execution in Qatar by $39bn. Recent awards in the utilities sector include the 2,000MW Dukhan solar scheme, which will double national solar capacity and boost the clean energy mix. In the construction sector, a pipeline of large infrastructure schemes, including Doha’s expansive plans for its highway and rail networks, promises to restore a more predictable rhythm to the market. Altogether, non-hydrocarbon growth accelerated to a 4.4% year-on-year expansion in the third quarter of last year.
Geopolitically, Qatar has meanwhile emerged from a turbulent period with its strategic position reinforced rather than diminished. Two brushes with wider regional conflict in the past year might have unsettled a less diplomatically agile state. Instead, Doha has leveraged its indispensability – as an energy supplier, mediator and host to key US assets – to secure stronger security guarantees from Washington. Qatar has also emerged as a winner in Syria, where its long-term support for the anti-Assad opposition has translated into substantial current opportunities. Doha-based construction group UCC Holding is now the anchor for two foreign investment deals: one worth $7bn in the energy sector and another worth $4bn in the aviation sector.
None of this is accidental. As with its investments in the gas sector, Doha’s successes today are the result of long-term strategy. And what lies ahead is precisely what the government has been telegraphing for years – LNG expansion, ambitious public spending and a focus on converting today’s gas windfalls into economic resilience. If 2026 does indeed deliver Qatar a standout performance, it will not be because of commodity prices, but because the different pieces of Doha’s plans are all finally falling into place.

MEED’s February 2026 report on Qatar includes:
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Aldar acquires land for upcoming developments in Abu Dhabi3 February 2026
Abu Dhabi-based real estate developer Aldar Properties has announced the acquisition of several land plots for upcoming developments in Abu Dhabi.
Aldar said that the plots total over 2.3 million square metres (sq m) across Saadiyat Island and Yas Island.
The developer expects to deliver more than 3,000 new residential units on these sites.
On Saadiyat Island, Aldar will build villas and mansions; on Yas Island, it will develop masterplanned communities.
The projects are expected to be formally launched later this year.
This development follows Aldar’s announcement in October last year of a series of major projects across the residential, commercial and logistics sectors in Abu Dhabi, with a combined gross development value of AED3.8bn ($1bn).
Aldar has committed to a new residential community in the Alreeman area of Al-Shamkha, to offer over 2,000 rental units.
On Yas Island, it will deliver 665 residential units to the rental market, including a gated community totalling 217 units.
Additionally, Aldar will develop 448 new apartments on Yas Island as an extension of Yas Residential Village.
On the commercial front, the company will focus on developing office spaces in key business districts across the UAE to meet demand for Grade-A office space.
Aldar will also deliver the UAE’s first Tesla Experience Centre on Yas Island. The facility, spanning more than 5,000 sq m, will include a showroom, service centre, and delivery and operations hall. It is scheduled for completion in 2027.
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Saudi’s Ceer awards automotive supplier park deal3 February 2026

Saudi Arabia’s electric car manufacturer Ceer has awarded a contract to build an automotive supplier park next to its electric vehicle (EV) production facility in King Abdullah Economic City (KAEC).
The contract was awarded to Jeddah-based construction firm Modern Building Leaders (MBL).
The automotive supplier park will include production and ancillary facilities for various suppliers and provide the material supply infrastructure for Ceer’s EV plant.
The facilities include:
- Cold stamping, body-in-white assembly and stamping facility – Shin Young (South Korea)
- Hot stamping, sub-frames and axles subsystem supply facility – Benteler Group (Austria)
- Façade and exterior-trim supply facility – JVIS (US)
- Instrument panel, trims and console supply facility – Forvia (France)
- Seat supplier – Lear Corporation (US)
Netherlands-based engineering firm Arcadis is the project consultant, and Pac Project Advisors is the project management consultant.
Ceer retendered the project in September last year.
Ceer project
In February 2024, MEED exclusively reported that the client had awarded a SR5bn ($1.3bn) contract to MBL to build its first EV production plant.
The plant is being constructed in phases at an estimated total cost of about SR7bn ($1.87bn).
The production facility will design, manufacture and sell a range of vehicles for consumers in Saudi Arabia and the Middle East, including sedans and sports utility vehicles.
Ceer is a joint venture of Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth vehicle, the Public Investment Fund (PIF), and Taiwan-based Hon Hai Precision Industry Company, which trades as Foxconn internationally.
Ceer is the second EV company to set up a production plant at KAEC.
Ceer signed a land purchase agreement worth SR359m ($95.7m) with master developer Emaar, the Economic City, for land at KAEC.
The 1 million square-metre site is located in Industrial Valley, near King Abdullah Port.
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Morocco awards $482m phosphate mine works contract3 February 2026
Morocco’s Office Cherifien des Phosphates (OCP) has awarded China-based Dalian Heavy Industry Equipment Group a contract to provide phosphate mining services.
The contract, valued at CNY3bn ($482m), is the largest order won by Dalian Heavy Industry Equipment to date, as well as its first engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) deal overseas.
The scope of work includes civil engineering and the supply of core equipment such as stacker-reclaimers, crushers and belt conveyors, as well as integrated services covering the entire process of phosphate mining, beneficiation and material transportation.
Dalian Heavy Industry Equipment has begun work on its contract, which it announced it had won in late January.
Morocco holds the world’s largest phosphate rock reserves, which are used to produce fertilisers and battery materials.
Major phosphate rock deposits are concentrated in the central region around Khouribga, as well as about 120 kilometres south of Casablanca in the Chaouia area.
There are also reserves in the southern Oued Eddahab-Lagouira region near Boucraa and the central-western region around Youssoufia, roughly 80km southeast of El-Jadida in the Doukkala-Abda area.
Prior to the contract award to Dalian Heavy Industry Equipment, OCP awarded another Chinese contractor, Sinoma Construction, an EPC contract for an advanced phosphate processing unit.
The deal, also announced in January, covers the entire project cycle, including design, procurement, construction and commissioning of chemical facilities.
The contract won by Sinoma Construction was also its first contract with OCP in Morocco.
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