Saudi offtaker holds Taiba and Qassim bidder meetings
22 August 2023

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Saudi Power Procurement Company (SPPC) started one-on-one clarification meetings on 21 August with the consortiums that submitted proposals to develop four gas-fired independent power projects (IPP) with a total combined capacity of 7,200MW in Saudi Arabia.
Four utility developer consortiums proposed to develop the Qassim 2 and Taiba 2 IPP projects in late July, and the Qassim 1 and Taiba 1 IPP projects on 15 August, as MEED reported.
Each of the four schemes will have the capacity to generate 1,800MW of electricity.
According to industry sources, the four consortiums vying to win at least one of the four contracts comprise:
- Acwa Power (local) / Saudi Electricity Company (local)
- Taqa (UAE) / Jera (Japan)
- Nebras (Qatar) / Marafiq (local) / Kepco (South Korea)
- AlJomaih (local) / EDF (France) / Sojitz (Japan)
The offtaker qualified over 20 companies to bid for the contracts, as MEED reported in February.
Packaged initially as two individual IPPs, each with a capacity of 3,600MW, the two projects have been split into four smaller schemes.
Taiba IPP
The 3,600MW Taiba IPP, the first of two original schemes to be launched last year, received a single bid in November last year.
A team comprising Saudi utility developer Acwa Power and Abu Dhabi National Energy (Taqa) is understood to have submitted a bid for the contract on 28 November.
Another consortium containing Korea Electric Power Corporation (Kepco) and Qatar’s Nebras Power was expected to bid, but declined to submit, according to industry sources.
These are the first gas-fired power generation plants to be procured since 2016, when Saudi Arabia awarded the 1,500MW Fadhili IPP to a consortium led by France’s Engie.
UAE-headquartered Cranmore Partners is the client’s financial adviser for the project.
Germany’s Fichtner Consulting and UK-based Linklaters have been appointed as technical and legal advisers, respectively.
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- Overview of the UAE projects market landscape
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Saudi Landbridge finds its moment in Gulf turmoil15 April 2026
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Construction writerThe strategic case for the Saudi Landbridge has never been more urgent. SAR’s appointment of Spain’s Typsa as lead design consultant, reported by MEED this week, is more than a procurement milestone. After two decades of delays, it reflects how the long-deferred project has become a strategic necessity.
The conflict reshaping the Middle East has made that necessity more immediate. Red Sea transits are costly and unpredictable. The Strait of Hormuz carries risk no insurer can fully price. Saudi Arabia’s most valuable exports, including crude oil, refined products, petrochemicals and industrial goods, move almost entirely by sea through routes that are no longer reliably secure.
The kingdom sits between two coastlines with no rail link connecting them. That gap is now an economic exposure.
The $27bn project addresses it directly. More than 1,500 kilometres of track, anchored by a 900km railway between Riyadh and Jeddah, will provide direct freight access from King Abdullah Port on the Red Sea, with upgrades to the Riyadh-Dammam line and a new connection to Yanbu.
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Exporters targeting Europe and the Americas load at Jeddah; those serving Asia pivot east to Dammam by rail, on demand, without Hormuz risk or Red Sea freight surcharges.
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With design now under way and construction tenders expected imminently, the Landbridge is closer to reality than at any point in its troubled history. Regional disruption did not create this project. But it has made the argument for it unanswerable.
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Indian firm selected for Saudi sewage treatment project15 April 2026

Saudi Arabia’s National Water Company is understood to have recently selected Indian contractor VA Tech Wabag as its preferred bidder for a contract to expand a sewage treatment plant (STP) in Al-Majmaah in Riyadh Province.
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The scope includes the construction of sewage treatment plant units, a pumping station and an effluent surplus line. It also covers the installation of a Scada system, supervisory control systems and associated facilities.
As MEED understands, six bids were submitted last year, including from local firms Alkhorayef Water & Power Technologies, Al-Rafia Contracting, Civil Works Company, Saudi Sdn Water & Energy and Washnah Trading & Contracting.
The project forms part of Saudi Arabia’s broader push to expand treatment and reuse infrastructure under Vision 2030, particularly across the Riyadh region.
MEED recently revealed that NWC had awarded an EPC contract for the latest phase of its long-term operations and maintenance sewage treatment programme.
The contract to build and upgrade sewage treatment plants with a combined capacity of about 440,000 cubic metres a day was awarded to a consortium led by China’s Jiangsu United Water Technology.
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Kuwait awards $565m upstream oil contract15 April 2026
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Kuwait’s Heavy Engineering Industries & Shipbuilding Company (Heisco) has been awarded a contract for flowlines and associated works in North Kuwait by the state-owned upstream operator Kuwait Oil Company (KOC).
In a statement to Kuwait’s stock exchange, Heisco said it had received a formal contract award letter for the project, valued at KD174.2m ($565m).
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Heisco was the fourth-lowest bidder for the contract.
In its stock market statement, Heisco said that the financial impact of the contract will be determined at a later stage, with further updates to be provided as the project progresses.
Heisco has also signed a renewal agreement with a local bank for a KD50m ($165m) loan.
The company said in a disclosure statement that the loan is intended to finance Heisco’s activities in Kuwait and other countries.
“Our company has renewed the credit facilities agreement with one of the local banks to finance its activities,” it said.
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It submitted a bid of KD11,919,652 ($38.6m) for the project to implement renovation works on the artificial island that forms part of the port at the refinery.
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The Mina Abdullah refinery was integrated with the Mina Al-Ahmadi refinery as part of the $16bn Clean Fuels Project, which came online in 2021.
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READ THE APRIL 2026 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDFEconomic shock threatens long-term outlook; Riyadh adjusts to fiscal and geopolitical risk; GCC contractor ranking reflects gigaprojects slowdown.
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Sirte oil projects expected to progress in Libya15 April 2026

Three oil projects located in Libya’s Sirte basin are expected to be prioritised in the wake of Libya’s recent budget deal, according to industry sources.
The projects are being developed by Libya’s Waha Oil Company, a subsidiary of the state-owned National Oil Corporation (NOC).
All three projects will develop Libyan reservoirs that have not yet been tapped.
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The Waha concession covers 13 million acres.
The stakeholders in Libya’s Waha concessions include France’s TotalEnergies, which has a 20.41% stake, and US-based ConocoPhillips.
In March, MEED revealed that South Korea’s Daewoo had pulled out of the tender process for Libya’s 6J North Gialo oil field development project.
Daewoo had formed a partnership with Egypt’s Petrojet to participate in the tender process.
The only other company to submit a bid for the project was UK-based Petrofac, which filed for administration in October last year.
In September last year, MEED reported that two bids had been submitted for the project and were under evaluation.
The 6J North Gialo project was the first to be tendered; it was expected to be followed by NC98, with the Gialo 3 project likely to be tendered last.
The NC98 field is located in the southeast area of Libya’s Sirte basin. Waha Oil Company ran a technical workshop for the NC98 project in June 2023.
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