Saudi Arabia extends Jubail 4 and 6 bid deadline

30 July 2024

 

Saudi Water Partnership Company (SWPC) has extended by a further two weeks the tender closing date for a contract to develop an independent water project (IWP) in Jubail, Saudi Arabia.

The previous bid submission date was 31 July, a month later than the initial 30 June deadline.

According to a source close to the project, SWPC expects to receive bids by 18 August.

The contract covers two plants located in Jubail in Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province – Jubail 4 and 6 – with a total combined capacity of 600,000 cubic metres a day (cm/d) using reverse osmosis technology.

The state water offtaker requested proposals for the Jubail 4 and 6 IWP in January this year, four months after it qualified nine individual companies and consortiums to bid for the contract.

The following utility developers and investors are qualified to bid for the contract: 

  • Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (Taqa)
  • Acciona (Spain)
  • Acwa Power (local)
  • Ajlan & Bros (local) / Rawafid Industrial Company (local)
  • Al-Jomaih Energy Water Company (local)  / Sogex Oman Company (local) 
  • GS Inima (Spain/South Korea)
  • International Power (Engie, France)
  • Marubeni Corporation (Japan)
  • Power & Water Utility Company for Jubail & Yanbu (Marafiq, local)

The desalination plant will be located 18 kilometres south of Jubail Industrial City, adjacent to four existing desalination units – Jubail phase one, Jubail phase two, and the Jubail 3A and 3B IWP facilities.

As with the previous seawater reverse osmosis (SWRO) IWP contracts that have already been awarded in the kingdom, the successful bidder, through a project company, will develop the project and sell the entire capacity and output to SWPC under a 25-year water-purchase agreement (WPA).

A credit support agreement from the government of Saudi Arabia backs SWPC’s obligations under the WPA.

SWPC’s transaction advisory team for the project comprises Netherlands-headquartered KPMG Professional Services as lead and financial adviser, UK-based Eversheds Sutherland as legal adviser and Canada’s WSP as technical adviser.

It also appointed UAE-based Future Water & Power Consulting to assist with the project tender and with finalising the site studies required for the bid.

Recent IWPs

SWPC has so far awarded the contracts for six IWP projects in Saudi Arabia: Rabigh 3, Shuqaiq 3, Yanbu 4 (Ar-Rayis 1), Jubail 3A, Jubail 3B and Rabigh 4. A seventh contract for developing the Shuaibah 3 SWRO plan was also directly negotiated and awarded in 2022.

The seven IWP schemes have a total combined capacity of 3.3 million cm/d.

SWPC received two bids in April for a contract to develop the 300,000 cm/d Ras Mohaisen IWP scheme.

The bidders are Spain’s Acciona and a team comprising the local firms Acwa Power, Haji Abdullah Alireza & Partners Company and AlKifah Holding.

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Jennifer Aguinaldo
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    Foreign interest in Syria’s oil and gas sector is growing as the government moves to revive the industry and elevated global energy prices improve the economics of new developments.

    A series of agreements signed in recent months has attracted some of the world’s largest energy companies, raising expectations that investment and production could accelerate.

    However, despite growing optimism, significant security, financial and regulatory challenges remain, which could constrain the pace of growth for years to come.

    Military control

    Optimism among foreign businesses about potential opportunities in the country was boosted in January this year when Syria’s central government regained control of most of the country’s oil and gas assets.

    On 13 January 2026, the Syrian government launched an offensive against the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in the territories of the Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria.

    The offensive was initially focused on eastern Aleppo Governorate, around the towns of Deir Hafer and Maskanah, and was expanded on 17 January to include Raqqa, Deir ez-Zor and Al-Hasakah Governorates.

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    Before the outbreak of the Syrian civil war in 2011, this field produced about 10 million cubic metres of natural gas a day.

    On 18 January, an agreement was signed under which Damascus assumed administrative and security control over all major oil and gas assets previously held by the SDF in the northeast of the country.

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    The push to take control of the oil and gas assets came ahead of the US and Israel attacking Iran on 28 February, which led to a regional conflict and disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

    Disruption in the waterway – which normally transports about 20 million barrels a day (b/d) of oil and refined products, as well as around 20% of the world’s liquefied natural gas – triggered a surge in global energy prices and sent oil companies scrambling to develop resources that did not rely on the strait as an export route.

    Syria is increasingly being viewed as a potential option for major oil and gas development projects due to its significant unrealised reserves and its geographic position across the Mediterranean from consumer markets in Europe.

    Syria’s production currently stands at around 110,000 b/d, down from a peak of 380,000 b/d in 2011, according to a report published by the US-Syria Business Council in April.

    The country’s recoverable oil reserves are estimated at 2.5 billion barrels, and Syria also has significant gas reserves.

    In April, Yousef Qiblawy, chief executive of the state-owned Syria Petroleum Company (SPC), said his organisation aimed to double national production before 2027 and boost output to 800,000 b/d by the end of 2029, not including offshore production.

    He said: “Before the takeover of the northeast, we were producing 10,000-15,000 b/d.

    “Currently, we are producing 100,000 b/d, and the plan now is to double this production number by the end of this year.”

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    In 2013, Russia’s Soyuzneftegaz signed an offshore exploration agreement with Damascus, but the project was abandoned during the civil war and never progressed to drilling.

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    In recent months, a range of significant deals and meetings has raised expectations for the future of Syria’s oil and gas sector.

    On 11 May, SPC announced plans for Syria’s first-ever offshore oil and gas exploration project.

    The deep-water project is being carried out in partnership with US-based Chevron and Qatar’s UCC Holding.

    SPC said that it had, together with Chevron and UCC Holding, defined the boundaries of the offshore block, paving the way for finalising contracts and starting technical operations this year.

    The three companies previously signed a preliminary deal in February to evaluate offshore oil and gas exploration in Syrian waters.

    On 12 May, France’s TotalEnergies, state-owned QatarEnergy and US-based ConocoPhillips signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with SPC relating to the exploration of Syria’s offshore Block 3.

    Under the terms of the preliminary deal, the companies will carry out a technical review of the area.

    The agreement also established a framework for technical and commercial discussions related to exploration activities on the block.

    ConocoPhillips also signed another MoU in November last year, along with Houston-headquartered Novaterra Energy, focused on developing several gas fields and launching exploration programmes.

    This MoU included an agreement to rehabilitate the gas plant at the Conoco field in Deir ez-Zor province.

    At the time, Qiblawy said the agreement was expected to boost the country’s gas production by 4-5 million cubic metres a day within a year.

    On 8 May, the Croatian oil company INA and Hungary’s MOL announced that they had held a series of meetings with SPC focused on exploring options to restart INA’s oil and gas operations in Syria.

    They said a joint technical team established by INA and SPC was assessing the feasibility of INA resuming operations on its Syrian concessions by evaluating operational, technical, commercial and regulatory conditions.

    In 2011, oil and gas production at INA’s Syrian concessions had reached 37,300 barrels of oil equivalent a day.

    By the time the company suspended operations in Syria in 2012, it had invested approximately $1.1bn in the country and had built a gas processing plant at the Hayan gas field.

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    Gulfsands is the official operator of Syria’s Block 26, but for 15 years after the start of the Syrian civil war, it could not access the asset.

    The company declared force majeure in late 2011 and, until recently, it was under the control of the Kurdish-led SDF.

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    He added: “This development provides a strong foundation for the recommencement of operations and investment.

    “We are now back on the ground in Syria, working closely with SPC to accelerate towards a full resumption of activities.”

    Bell also said that, as a result of a global drive to diversify away from “traditional choke points like the Strait of Hormuz”, Syria had the potential to become “a new world energy hub”.

    In April, Saudi Arabia’s ADES Holding Company signed an implementation contract with SPC to develop several gas fields in Syria.

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    Over recent months, expectations have been building about a potential deal involving US-based oil and gas companies Baker Hughes, Hunt Energy and Argent LNG.

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    For international energy companies seeking opportunities outside traditional export routes and geopolitical chokepoints, Syria is increasingly emerging as a market with significant long-term potential, albeit one accompanied by substantial risk.

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