Phosphate, gold, copper lead Saudi Arabia’s $1.3 trillion untapped mining market

Students from King Abdulaziz University learn about the mining process at Ma'aden's Mahd Al-Dahab mine in Madinah province. (Twitter: @MaadenKSA)
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Updated 11 January 2022
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Phosphate, gold, copper lead Saudi Arabia’s $1.3 trillion untapped mining market

  • Under the Saudi Vision 2030 development plan, mining is positioned as the third pillar of the country’s economic development

Saudi Arabia holds an estimated $1.3 trillion worth of untapped mineral deposits — led by phosphate, gold and copper — according to the National Industrial Development and Logistics Program.

These three commodities, all of which are already being mined in the Kingdom, will no doubt be much discussed at Future Minerals Forum, to be held in Riyadh between Jan. 11 and 13.

NIDLP established a Geological Survey Program in 2020, expected to last six years, for the Arabian Shield — the pre-Cambrian rock-bed formed more than 4 billion years ago and which measures up to 14 kilometers deep — in the Kingdom’s western region.

The program, which was created to support the Kingdom’s diversification away from oil, estimates the value of Saudi Arabia’s largest three minerals resources at $321 billion of phosphate, $229 billion of gold and $222 billion of copper, as well as $70 billion worth each of iron and uranium — among a total of 48 minerals and metals.

The Saudi Arabian Mining Co., or Ma’aden, said that the $6.4 billion expansion of its phosphate fertilizer portfolio will add 3 million tons of capacity, boosting it to more than 9 million tons by 2025. This will make the firm one of the top three global phosphate fertilizer producers, and place Saudi Arabia as the second largest phosphate fertilizer exporter in the world.

These figures have attracted the interest of major mining operators around the world.

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NIDLP established a Geological Survey Program in 2020, expected to last six years, for the Arabian Shield — the pre- Cambrian rock bed formed more than 4 billion years ago and which measures up to 14 kilometers deep — in the Kingdom’s western region.

The chairman of Canada-based Ivanhoe Mines, Robert Friedman, recently said: “We think the (Arabian Shield’s) potential is limitless for diamonds, rare earth, lithium, copper, gold and other minerals.

“It’s big, it’s unexplored and it’s blessed by cheap energy, new infrastructure and proximity to markets.”

The Saudi Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources said that it received more than 1,500 licensing requests last year after the passing of a new law last June making it easier for foreign companies to invest in the Kingdom.

Under the Saudi Vision 2030 development plan, mining is positioned as the third pillar of the country’s economic development, after energy and petrochemicals, as it aims to diversify the economy away from a reliance on oil.

NIDLP said that it plans to “grow and capture maximum value from the mining sector,” with a broad 10-year plan to double the existing mining workforce to almost 500,000, increase private sector involvement and promote private investment.


Saudi factories and mines grow sharply in 2025, new licenses jump 23%

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Saudi factories and mines grow sharply in 2025, new licenses jump 23%

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia’s industrial and mining sectors surged in 2025, with 23 percent more licenses being issued than in the previous 12 months, according to official figures.

The 1,660 permits signed off by the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources were worth more than SR76 billion ($20.52 billion), and are expected to create nearly 35,000 jobs, with the increase pointing to growing investor appetite across the Kingdom.

Factory activity also accelerated in 2025, with 1,201 facilities commencing operations, up 11.7 percent from 2024, generating more than SR31 billion in capital and creating over 45,000 jobs as the Kingdom’s manufacturing base continues to expand.

The developments support Saudi Arabia’s National Industrial Strategy, launched by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in October 2022, that aims to drive sector growth and increase the number of factories in the Kingdom to 36,000 by 2035.

“This comes as part of the ministry’s ongoing efforts to achieve the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030, which aims to maximize the impact of industry and mining in diversifying the national economy,” the ministry’s release added.

The strategy focuses on 12 sub-sectors, targeting more than 800 investment opportunities worth SR1 trillion, striving toward tripling the industrial gross domestic product.

The ministry underlined that these indicators reflect its ongoing efforts to develop the mining sector, enhance its global competitiveness, and establish it as the third pillar of Saudi industry, while also highlighting the division’s rising attractiveness to investors.

The release explained that the ministry issued 736 new mining licenses in 2025, including 479 for exploration, 127 for building materials quarry, 61 for small mining and quarry exploitation, 52 for prospecting, and 17 surplus minerals.

By the end of 2025, the total number of active mining licenses in Saudi Arabia reached around 2,925, spanning numerous permit categories in the sector.

These included 1,553 for building materials quarry, 1,018 for exploration, 275 for small-scale mining and quarrying, 67 for prospecting, and 12 for surplus mineral licenses.

The Kingdom has become one of the fastest-growing mining investment environments globally, supported by rapid license issuance, investor incentives, and readily accessible electronic geological data.

Periodic bulletins for the industrial and mining sectors, issued by the National Industrial and Mining Information Center under the ministry, enhance transparency by providing investors and decision-makers with accurate, up-to-date data on licenses and sector developments.