Saudi water sector innovations reach $53.3m in value

The Saudi Water Authority has estimated the market value of innovations and entrepreneurial projects in the water sector at around SR200 million ($53.3 million). AL-EQTISADIAH
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Updated 07 December 2025
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Saudi water sector innovations reach $53.3m in value

RIYADH: The Saudi Water Authority has estimated the market value of innovations and entrepreneurial projects in the water sector at around SR200 million ($53.3 million), all linked to local and international investors and aimed at enhancing water security and supporting sustainable solutions in the Kingdom, according to Tariq Al-Ghaffari, vice president for research and promising water technologies, speaking to Al-Eqtisadiah.

Al-Ghaffari said: “The authority works through a dedicated platform for innovators to transform research ideas into scalable investment opportunities,” emphasizing that the authority’s entrepreneurship sector offers innovators multiple options, including sharing patents with local and international companies to maximize impact and increase competitiveness.

Al-Ghaffari noted that the authority has successfully built partnerships with more than 20 local companies, which have evolved into global collaborations to address existing water challenges in Saudi Arabia. “Their solutions are now being exported abroad,” he said.

Jeddah conference

Jeddah will host the fourth edition of the Water Sustainability Innovation Conference from December 8 to 10, 2025, featuring 169 speakers and around 7,300 participants from 133 countries, including the US, China, Singapore, and the UK, along with Canada, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Brazil, and Italy, alongside several Gulf and Arab nations.

The conference is considered the world’s largest platform bringing together experts, innovators, and entrepreneurs in the water sector.

Al-Ghaffari said more than 2,700 international participants are expected to attend in person, emphasizing that this number represents “only the beginning” given the global momentum the conference has gained.

Global innovation award 

The conference will also feature the Global Innovation Award, which has attracted over 2,500 innovators from 119 countries, submitting initiatives to address challenges across six key tracks identified by the authority, all focused on critical issues in the water sector.

According to Al-Ghaffari, an international judging panel of six experts from six different countries will select the first-place winner, who will receive $100,000, along with a $250,000 technical development voucher to support the winning innovation through platforms operated by the Saudi Water Authority.

This extensive activity — from supporting innovation and opening markets to hosting the world’s largest water conference — reflects Saudi Arabia’s transformation into an attractive hub for advanced water technologies and a key contributor to shaping the future of water sustainability regionally and globally.


Egypt’s Suez Canal revenues reach $2bn in 5 months, up 17.5% YoY 

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Egypt’s Suez Canal revenues reach $2bn in 5 months, up 17.5% YoY 

RIYADH: Egypt’s Suez Canal recorded revenues of $1.97 billion from 5,874 ship transits since the beginning of July, marking a 17.5 percent year-on-year increase, Suez Canal Authority Chairman Osama Rabie said during a meeting with a delegation from the International Monetary Fund. 

This comes in line with Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly’s statement last October that shipping traffic through the Suez Canal — one of the world’s most important maritime arteries — would return to normal within three months following the peace agreement and ceasefire in Gaza.  

It also aligns with Rabie’s comments in an interview with Asharq Bloomberg at the end of last month, in which he predicted that total revenues for the current year would exceed $4 billion, slightly higher than 2024 figures, with a gradual increase expected beginning next fiscal year.  

Suez Canal revenues to reach $10 bn  

Rabie further forecast that the canal’s revenues would improve during the 2026/2027 fiscal year to around $8 billion, rising to approximately $10 billion the following year, according to a statement issued by the Suez Canal Authority. 

The canal generated a total of $40 billion between 2019 and 2024 and remains the country’s most important source of foreign currency.  

The IMF recently projected that Suez Canal revenues would begin to recover during the current fiscal year, with a gradual increase expected to reach $11.9 billion by fiscal year 2029/2030 as tensions in the Red Sea subside. 

Rabie noted in a previous interview with Asharq Bloomberg that vessel traffic has shown steady improvement following the agreement to end the war in Gaza, adding that shipping companies are eager to resume transiting the canal.  

French shipping company CMA CGM recently conducted a trial transit of two large cargo vessels through the Suez Canal from Bab-el-Mandeb — a move Rabie said is likely to encourage other major shipping lines to return to the route.