Saudi Arabia waives customs duties on certain goods to boost industrial sector

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Updated 07 March 2024
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Saudi Arabia waives customs duties on certain goods to boost industrial sector

RIYADH: Customs duties on certain manufacturing products will be waived from April 1 as the Saudi government seeks to stimulate the industrial sector.

The decision, made by the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources, will help businesses with valid import licenses reduce their financial burden and costs associated with importing specific products and improve their competitiveness and profitability.

It will also allow them to invest more in their operations, expand their production capacities, and ultimately contribute to the growth and development of the industrial sector in Saudi Arabia, according to the Saudi Press Agency. 

The ministry confirmed that the expansion of the industrial customs exemption includes raw materials, semi-processed goods, and fully manufactured products, as well as packaging materials, machinery, equipment, and spare parts — all essential for production processes without any restrictions, the SPA report said. 

However, certain items produced locally by industrial facilities as outputs for their factories or imported as inputs with sufficient justifications to be excluded from customs exemption can be exempted and added to the list of industrial capabilities for local products. 

Accordingly, the Ministry of Industry invited facility owners to submit their customs exemption requests by accessing the platform, selecting the service, and attaching the necessary data and justifications starting from March 14. The body noted that the required information includes average selling prices, product name, and image, as well as major suppliers, customers, and other relevant details.

In its report, SPA pointed out that expanding the scope of industrial customs exemption aligns with the Kingdom’s commitment to supporting the industrial sector and enhancing manufacturing capabilities.

The news agency added that this move is also in line with the goals of Saudi Vision 2030 and the National Industrial Strategy, reaffirming the ministry’s role in stimulating, empowering, and accelerating growth in the Kingdom. 

According to the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources, the number of industrial units in the Kingdom recorded a 10 percent surge year-on-year in 2023 to reach 11,549. 

Speaking on behalf of the ministry, Jarrah bin Mohammed Al-Jarrah revealed in February that the new establishments were set up with an investment of SR1.54 trillion ($48.4 billion). 

The rise in the number of factories aligns with Saudi Arabia’s plan of boosting industrialization and achieving a target of 36,000 plants by 2035. 

Moreover, the number of new licenses issued in 2023 reached 1,379, with investments amounting to more than SR81 billion. 

The Kingdom’s industrial sector is experiencing sustained growth, with manufacturing assets reaching $132 billion since the launch of the economic diversification strategy Vision 2030 in 2016.


Qatar wealth fund plans to invest in 5 new VC funds 

Updated 12 sec ago
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Qatar wealth fund plans to invest in 5 new VC funds 

DOHA: Qatar Investment Authority plans to invest in five new venture capital funds as part of an ​expanded $3 billion venture capital program, the sovereign wealth fund said on Monday.

The new funds, called Greycroft, Ion Pacific, Liberty City Ventures, Shorooq and Speedinvest, are set to open offices in Doha in an effort to develop Qatar as a venture capital hub, it said in a statement.

The “Fund of Funds” initiative was unveiled in 2024 to attract venture capital firms to Qatar, ‌build a ‌robust environment for entrepreneurs and help diversify ‌its ⁠economy away ​from fossil ‌fuel revenues, as the country follows the path of other wealthy Gulf peers.

Qatar’s prime minister on Sunday announced an expansion of the fund to reach up to $3 billion.

“This year, we move from momentum to scale,” Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said as he opened the Qatar edition of the Web Summit technology conference.

The ⁠expansion would potentially target investments besides series A and B funding rounds.

“We are ‌now expanding the scope to do ‍later rounds, so that may open ‍up conversations with a different set of managers,” said Mohsin ‍Pirzada, the head of funds at QIA, in an interview with Reuters.

“We will continue to be quite flexible and support earlier stages as well, but there are sufficient pools of capital within the country to ​go after those types of opportunities,” he said, citing credit lending facilities.

The QIA has assets under management ⁠worth $580 billion, according to Global SWF, a sovereign wealth fund tracker, and late last year it launched its own AI-focused company Qai as it bets on the booming sector to drive economic diversification.

As part of its efforts, the country has launched a pilot computing credit program that provides free computing for startups that are based in Doha, which could be applicable to managers that are part of the Fund of Funds scheme.

The pilot program is going to be “a big differentiator in terms of what our program is offering ‌vis-a-vis our peers in the region,” Pirzada said.