Page added on July 30, 2013
* Riyadh metro projected to carry 1.16 mln people daily at start
* Poorer Saudis, women may be major customers
* Metro projects could diversify economy in top Saudi cities
* Part of effort to curb rise in domestic oil consumption
* Assembling foreign labour force will be challenge
By Marwa Rashad and Praveen Menon
RIYADH/DUBAI, July 30 (Reuters) – A $22.5 billion plan to build Riyadh’s first metro rail system aims to achieve more than improving the quality of life in the congested Saudi capital: it is part of an ambitious effort to shift the country’s economy beyond oil.
The government awarded contracts for the system to three foreign-led consortia on Sunday. Six rail lines carrying electric, driverless trains and extending 176 kilometres (110 miles) are to be completed by 2019.
Similar projects are underway in other top Saudi cities; last August the government approved a $16.5 billion plan to modernise the transport system in Mecca, including construction of a metro, and Jeddah is preparing plans to build a metro that would cost around $9.3 billion.
The projects are part of an effort to improve social welfare for millions of poorer Saudis in the wake of the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings in the region. Saudi Arabia escaped serious unrest, but it aims to ensure social peace by ramping up spending on hospitals, schools and other infrastructure.
In the longer term, the world’s top oil exporter is trying to diversify its economy away from oil, to reduce its vulnerability to the next big drop in global energy prices.
The metro systems could aid that drive by changing the way Saudi cities operate, helping them develop easily accessible commercial and light industrial districts which house companies outside the oil sector, while stimulating real estate projects and other investment along the rail lines.
“I think the metro will transform Riyadh. With 170 km of rail, people will always be close to the metro. It’ll not just solve the traffic problem but also connect the financial hub, airport, malls and other parts of the city,” said Miguel Jurado, head of Spanish firm FCC Construction, which will help to build the project.
Ibrahim al-Sultan, head of the government body which supervises the project, estimated that each riyal spent on it would generate an indirect economic return of 3 riyals.
Concern about the country’s extreme dependence on oil was underlined this week when Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, in an open letter to the government, called for immediate steps to diversify the economy.
The metro systems may also help Saudi Arabia manage its oil resources more efficiently; only about 2 percent of Riyadh’s 6 million population currently use public transport, leaving most of the rest dependent on gasoline-guzzling cars.
Growth in domestic oil consumption, as the country’s young population expands, has been outpacing rises in oil production capacity. So over the next decade or two, Saudi Arabia could be forced to cut back its oil exports; the metro systems buy it time before it faces such a crunch.
“The metro will drive down energy requirements for the transport sector, if the metro is incentivised by the government as a replacement to motor vehicles, and reduce environmental pollution,” said John Sfakianakis, chief strategist at investment firm MASIC.
The Riyadh metro is projected to carry 1.16 million passengers daily when launched, increasing to nearly 3.6 million within 10 years – a significant fraction of all trips in the country, which currently has a population of about 28 million.
Saudi Arabia now consumes about 500,000 barrels per day of oil in the form of gasoline, and exports under 8 million bpd.
TRAFFIC
While the metros are unlikely to persuade some Saudis to abandon their love for the automobile, others may welcome the chance to escape severe traffic congestion in the big cities.
Despite the country’s oil wealth, analysts estimate millions of people live near the poverty line, and they will have a financial incentive to use the systems.
The metros may also have a social impact by making it easier for women to move around, in a country where they are not allowed to drive for religious reasons. The Riyadh metro carriages will have special “family sections” giving women privacy.
“For sure I will use the metro – it will be a major solution for the women problem in our society, since we don’t drive,” said Alaa Hassan, a female university student in Riyadh.
“I go to my university by minibus and I pay 2,000 riyals ($535) per month; other classmates who live nearer pay 800 to 1,000. For sure the metro will be cheaper.”
The government has not said exactly how it will fund the Riyadh metro project, although bankers have been speculating about possible issues of sukuk (Islamic bonds) which could help to deepen the country’s market in state-backed debt.
After more than two years of high oil prices, financing is not expected to be a problem; the government’s budget surplus in 2012 alone was 386.5 billion riyals ($103 billion).
But assembling the labour force to complete the project on time may be a challenge, because the country has been tightening controls on its large population of foreign workers in an effort to reduce unemployment among Saudi citizens.
A crackdown on illegal foreign workers caused tens of thousands of people to be deported or decide to leave the country this year. Fees designed to encourage companies to limit their use of foreigners, who are cheaper to hire than Saudis, have hurt profits at some Saudi construction firms.
“The workforce will be a challenge…We will need about 15,000 people during the whole period of work,” FCC’s Jurado said. “We have a period of eight to ten months to arrange for all these workers.”
10 Comments on "Huge Saudi metro projects aim to shift economy beyond oil"
Arthur on Tue, 30th Jul 2013 11:42 am
There is no more efficient means of transport in a big city than a metro. Riyadh has 5.7 million inhabitants (expected to grow to 8.3 million in 2030), the metro is long overdue.
This was big news in Holland yesterday, as the Dutch company Strukton will be part of the Samsung-Alsthom consortium to build the project. With 1 billion euro this is the largest project ever for a Dutch building company.
http://m.volkskrant.nl/vk/nl/2680/Economie/article/detail/3483419/2013/07/29/Grootste-order-ooit-voor-Strukton.dhtml
BillT on Tue, 30th Jul 2013 12:06 pm
And when the war bombs Riyadh, what then? Construction stops. The line never gets built and they all ride camels into the sunset…
Luke on Tue, 30th Jul 2013 12:24 pm
Good news for Riyadh, public transportation will be far more energy efficient than thousands of separate vehicles. But what will be the main source of energy to have the metro cars glide through their tubes. Fossil or solar?
Arthur on Tue, 30th Jul 2013 2:37 pm
“And when the war bombs Riyadh, what then?”
Who would want to bomb Riyadh?
Riyahd = Cairo + oil – Nile.
Poor Cairo has already a (modest) metro.
The Saudi’s better get real serious about the future. The Metro is a first good step. Massive solar investment next. And agressive birth control programs. The money should not be the problem, for the time being.
Kenz300 on Tue, 30th Jul 2013 3:47 pm
Quote from Arthur —— The Saudi’s better get real serious about the future. The Metro is a first good step. Massive solar investment next. And agressive birth control programs. The money should not be the problem, for the time being.”
——————
Sounds like a plan for the future… you have to have a plan to where you want to go or you wander aimlessly.
DC on Tue, 30th Jul 2013 5:05 pm
Gee that only took what…a century? Also, notice this project has a very Arab vibe to it.
-Driverless trains. Because employing people is you know, so 20th C.
-It will be built by ‘foreigners’ (ie the west). It will also likely be managed and staffed to a large extent like all arab mega-projects by European or North American specialists. Why? Because Arabs are too lazy and unqualified to even plan and build their own infrastructure.
The Sauds too little too late mentality, speaks volumes about their inherent laziness and where the priorities really lie. Of course, North America is no better with its cars-only policy, but still. They had the means and motivation DECADES ago to implement things like solar and mass-transit. But the fact Arabs wont even walk from one building to the next unless its connected with an air conditioned walkway means they are just wasting there time and money-again.
And time and money are two things those arabs dont have in unlimited quantities, just like their oil….
efsome on Tue, 30th Jul 2013 6:06 pm
I wonder if its possible to terraform S.A arid places (desert edges), ive seen a video named “greening the desert” by geoff lawton. If it’s possible to increase precipitation with trees it’ll be easier when they still have money and fossil fuels. It could be far valuable than soon to be abondened metro tunnels.
Arthur on Tue, 30th Jul 2013 7:01 pm
“I wonder if its possible to terraform S.A arid places”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_supply_and_sanitation_in_Saudi_Arabia
“The capital Riyadh, located in the heart of the country, is supplied with desalinated water pumped from the Persian Gulf over a distance of 467 km. Given the substantial oil wealth, water is provided almost for free. Despite improvements service quality remains poor. For example, in Riyadh water was available only once every 2.5 days in 2011, while in Jeddah it is available only every 9 days.[3] Institutional capacity and governance in the sector are weak, reflecting general characteristics of the public sector in Saudi Arabia.”
Matt Charles on Wed, 31st Jul 2013 3:12 am
The metro is a great idea for saudi. It would be even more amazing if the system ran on natural gas or renewable resources such as solar or electricity, decreasing the environmental impact also.
Kenz300 on Thu, 1st Aug 2013 1:03 am
A step in the right direction………..