Saudi Arabia’s Industrial Production Index up 0.9%: GASTAT

Short Url
Updated 10 July 2024
Follow

Saudi Arabia’s Industrial Production Index up 0.9%: GASTAT

RIYADH: Manufacturing of chemicals and food items helped drive Saudi Arabia’s Industrial Production Index up 0.9 percent in May compared to the previous month, official data showed. 

According to the General Authority for Statistics, the 0.8 percent rise in this sector helped push the index to 106.3 points in the fifth month of 2024.

Compared to April, the manufacturing of non-metallic products also increased by 0.9 percent, while the production of coke and refined petroleum products decreased by 0.4 percent during the same period. 

Saudi Arabia’s growth in the manufacturing sector is crucial to achieving the goals outlined in Vision 2030, as the Kingdom is steadily diversifying its economy by reducing its reliance on oil. 

“In the manufacturing sector, Saudi Arabia will work toward localizing renewable energy and industrial equipment sectors,” according to the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 website. 

The IPI is an economic indicator that reflects relative changes in the volume of industrial output. It is calculated based on production surveys.

However, Saudi Arabia’s overall IPI saw an annual decrease of 2.9 percent in May.

According to GASTAT, this decline in IPI was driven by a fall in mining and quarrying activities, which dropped by 9.7 percent year-on-year in May. 

This dip was attributed to Saudi Arabia’s decision to decrease its oil production to 8.9 million barrels per day in May 2024, aligned with an agreement by OPEC and its allies, known as OPEC+. 

To maintain market stability, the Kingdom reduced its oil output by 500,000 barrels per day in April 2023, and this cut has now been extended until December 2024.

“The index for oil activities in May 2024 decreased by 8.4 percent compared to the same month of the previous year due to the decline in oil production. While the index for non-oil activities increased by 12.8 percent, supported by an increase in all non-oil economic activities except for water activities,” said GASTAT in the report. 

The analysis revealed that manufacturing activities in the Kingdom witnessed a growth of 8.2 percent in May compared to the same month of the previous year, while electricity, gas, steam, and air conditioning supply operations rose by 6.6 percent during the same period.


RLC Global Forum 2026 opens, leading the agenda for transformation in retail industry

Updated 03 February 2026
Follow

RLC Global Forum 2026 opens, leading the agenda for transformation in retail industry

RIYADH: The RLC Global Forum 2026 opened in Riyadh on Feb. 3, aiming to shape the future of retail and consumer-facing industries by bringing together the most influential leaders from across the sector.

Addressing the opening session, Panos Linardos, chairman of RLC Global Forum, said: “We meet at a moment that feels fundamentally different from just a few years ago. Growth today is no longer linear. It is no longer evenly distributed. And it is no longer guaranteed. 

“We find ourselves at what we call a growth crossroads, a moment where traditional models are under pressure, geopolitical dynamics are reshaping trade and investment, and leadership choices carry longer-lasting consequences.”

He added that at the 2025 event, the discussions were focused on trust and collaboration in a time of disruption. 

“This year, the environment is more fragmented, more volatile, and more urgent,” he said, explaining that supply chains are shifting, consumer expectations are moving faster than organizations, and capital is more selective.

Linardos also stated that the boundaries between retail, real estate, technology, policy, and culture “are increasingly blurred.”

At a growth crossroads, progress is a shared responsibility requiring clarity, coordination, and balanced leadership, he said adding over the next two days, the forum will bring together global CEOs, retailers, and real estate leaders, as well as policymakers, academics, investors, and innovators.

“The purpose is clear: to examine how growth is being rebuilt, where it is being redefined, and what leadership looks like in this new context,” the forum chairman said.

Linardos set out details of the NextGen retail challenge, which is developed with the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Center at Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University and Monsha’at.

Vice Minister of Economy and Planning Ammar Nagadi used his opening remarks to put his perspective on how economic choices translate into competitiveness and long-term value is especially timely for the discussions ahead.

The 2026 forum is exploring six defining themes that capture the transformation reshaping global trade, consumption, and leadership: Growth in a Reordered World, AI and the Power of Multipliers, Global South as Growth Engine, Experience as Growth Infrastructure, Future Consumer Order, and Leadership Beyond Resilience.