Royal commission outlines industrial city spending

24 May 2023

The Royal Commission for Jubail & Yanbu (RCJY) is planning a significant ramp-up in spending as it seeks to expand its infrastructure and service offerings to attract foreign and domestic investment.

The multibillion-dollar project programme comprises projects in three industrial cities that RCJY operates: Jubail, Yanbu and Jizan.

At Jubail, the kingdom’s largest and oldest industrial hub, work is focused on expanding infrastructure in the fourth phase of the Jubail 2 industrial complex. Major forthcoming projects include a secondary road network, rainwater, potable water and sewage collection networks, pumping stations and substations.

Enhancing Jubail airport’s operational capabilities is another goal. Short-term projects to be tendered and awarded over the next 18 months include a new dedicated 25MW power plant, improvements to the runway, a new service building and a new airport entrance gateway.

As manufacturing capacity grows, RCJY also plans to double the transformer capacity of its substations 8AB, 26BD, 24BD and 18BD.

The final key project at Jubail for 2023-24 is the construction of the Dareen Bridge over the approach channel linking the Dareen neighbourhood with Aramco’s offshore facilities and those of the Ministry of Defence. The 350-metre bridge will have four lanes and a clearance of seven metres.

The capital expenditure programme for Yanbu up to the end of 2024 totals SR5.6bn, comprising 10 residential area projects worth SR1.8bn ($480m), eight industrial area projects worth SR1.9bn, and four schemes totalling SR2bn for the industrial area expansion.

Residential area works include the 18km extension of the Ali Ibn Abi Talib road to King Fahd road, the construction of secondary roads in the Al-Wurood and Al-Bastin neighbourhoods, and the site levelling of 150 hectares of land in the new Salmaniyah residential area. There will also be a tender for building 217 villas in the Al-Jar district.

In terms of industrial development, RCJY plans to develop infrastructure for new petrochemical and mining industries zones, new roads, a pipeline and utilities network, a storage area at King Fahd port and a flood protection channel.

The commission’s plans for Jizan Industrial City involve the tender and award of 139 projects worth SR21.1bn by 2027. The largest of these are for the RCJY’s headquarters in the city, a second phase seawater cooling system, a new re-export zone, a business development centre, a civil centre and educational facilities.

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Edward James
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