ACWA Power signs $800m water purchase agreement with Senegal

The project will have a production capacity of 400,000 cubic meters per day. File
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Updated 28 March 2024
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ACWA Power signs $800m water purchase agreement with Senegal

RIYADH: Saudi energy giant ACWA Power has signed an SR3 billion ($800 million) agreement with Senegal’s Ministry of Water to develop a desalination plant.

The company, partly owned by the Public Investment Fund, announced the inking of a water purchase agreement for the construction of the facility in Dakar, Senegal in a statement on the Saudi Stock Exchange, Tadawul.

ACWA Power will be responsible for the infrastructure, design and financing as well as construction, operation and maintenance of the Grande Cote seawater desalination plant in the West African country.

The project will have a production capacity of 400,000 cubic meters per day, the statement said.

Its first phase and financial impact are expected to materialize by the first quarter of 2028, with a contract duration of 32 years. 

This marks a continued partnership between the company and Senegal, as it has previously signed a memorandum of understanding with the Senegalese National Water Co. and the country’s National Electricity Co. in September 2022.

The MoU entailed the development of a 300,000 cubic meters per day seawater reverse osmosis plant in Grande Cote, located about 40 km north of the nation’s capital. 

The development was the first desalination project in the country to be facilitated through a public-private partnership and the largest treatment initiative of its kind in Sub-Saharan Africa.


UAE bank assets rise 0.8% to $1.43tn as credit expands: CBUAE data 

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UAE bank assets rise 0.8% to $1.43tn as credit expands: CBUAE data 

RIYADH: UAE bank assets rose 0.8 percent in November to 5.25 trillion Emirati dirhams ($1.43 trillion), extending growth in the sector as credit and deposits continued to expand, central bank data showed.  

Gross banking assets increased from 5.2 trillion dirhams in October, according to the Central Bank of the UAE’s Monetary and Banking Developments report. Gross credit rose 0.7 percent to 2.53 trillion dirhams, supported by growth in both domestic and foreign lending. 

The domestic expansion included a 0.4 percent rise in credit to the private sector, aligning with the UAE’s “Projects of the 50” agenda to stimulate private investment and reduce the economy's reliance on hydrocarbons. 

In its latest report, CBUAE stated: “Gross credit increased due to the combined growth in domestic credit by 9 billion dirhams and in foreign credit by 8.7 billion dirhams.” 

It added: “The growth in domestic credit was due to the increases in credit to the government sector by 2.6 percent, in the private sector by 0.4 percent, and in credit to the non-banking financial institutions by 3.6 percent, overshadowing the decrease in credit to the public sector (government-related entities) by 1 percent.” 

A notable shift was observed in the money supply data. While the narrow money supply aggregate M1 decreased by 1.7 percent due to a drop in monetary deposits, broader measures saw significant growth.  

The report stated: “The money supply aggregate M2 increased by 1.5 percent,” primarily due to a substantial 58.2 billion dirhams growth in quasi-monetary deposits.

Similarly, M3, which includes government deposits, also rose by 1.5 percent, “amplified by 8.6 billion dirhams increase in government deposits.” 

The simultaneous fall in M1 and rise in M2 and M3 suggests a liquidity transformation within the system, with money moving from checking accounts into savings, time deposits, and government accounts, which can be used for longer-term lending. 

The foundation of the banking system also strengthened, as “the monetary base increased by 1.7 percent.” This growth was driven by the growth in reserve account by 21.5 percent, in currency issued by 2.6 percent, and in monetary bills and Islamic certificates of deposit by 8.8 percent. 

On the deposits side, the report noted that “banks’ deposits increased by 1 percent,” totaling 3.23 trillion dirhams.

This growth was “driven by the growth in resident deposits by 1.4 percent,” which reached 2.97 trillion dirhams. Within resident deposits, the private sector led with a 1.2 percent increase, while deposits in government-related entities saw a significant 3 percent rise.