EU investments in Saudi Arabia to prosper over next 5 years, says ambassador
EU investments in Saudi Arabia to prosper over next 5 years, says ambassador/node/2630346/business-economy
EU investments in Saudi Arabia to prosper over next 5 years, says ambassador
Economic relations between Saudi Arabia and the EU are no longer limited to traditional trade exchange but have transformed into a multi-sector partnership. Getty
EU investments in Saudi Arabia to prosper over next 5 years, says ambassador
Updated 23 January 2026
Wissam Al-Muqrin Ranim Al-Osaimi Al-Eqtisadiah
RIYADH: European investments in Saudi Arabia are set to see notable growth over the next five years, encompassing green energy, metals, critical raw materials, advanced industry, and the digital sector.
Christophe Farnaud, the EU Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, confirmed to Al-Eqtisadiah that an anticipated memorandum of understanding with the Kingdom in the energy field will provide an organized framework for cooperation in energy transition and sustainability, boosting investor confidence in the long-term partnership between the two sides.
The volume of trade in goods and services between Saudi Arabia and the EU amounts to €90 billion ($105.6 billion), according to the latest data from 2024, making the EU the Kingdom’s second-largest trading partner, according to Farnaud.
Currently, 2,500 European companies operate within the Saudi market, highlighting the depth of economic relations between the two sides.
A qualitative development in relations
Farnaud affirmed that Saudi-European relations are witnessing qualitative development, especially since the EU’s adoption in 2022 of its strategy towards Gulf Cooperation Council countries, which is based on enhancing political, security, and economic cooperation, in addition to cultural and humanitarian exchange.
He noted that Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 constitutes an attractive framework for strengthening this partnership.
The ambassador also pointed out that the launch of the European Chamber of Commerce in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia during 2024 represented an important step to support cooperation between European and Saudi companies and enhance mutual investments, reflecting a positive outlook for the future of economic relations.
Economic relations are no longer limited to traditional trade exchange but have transformed into a multi-sector partnership, including investment, services, manufacturing, energy, and sustainability, according to Farnaud.
Christophe Farnaud, the EU Ambassador to Saudi Arabia meeting Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in 2025. X/@EUAmbGCC
Relaunching Free Trade Agreement negotiations
The ambassador revealed ongoing discussions to relaunch negotiations for a Free Trade Agreement between the EU and GCC countries, which have been stalled since 2008, aiming to reach a modern agreement covering investment, services, intellectual property protection, technical standards, and government procurement.
He also indicated readiness to launch negotiations for a bilateral strategic partnership agreement with Saudi Arabia, including industrial cooperation, critical raw materials, energy, and sustainability, alongside working to sign a memorandum of understanding in the energy field in the coming period.
The EU, according to Farnaud, is the largest foreign investor in Saudi Arabia, holding 29 percent of the total foreign direct investment stock, which amounted to 30.7 billion euros in 2023.
Investments are concentrated in the transport, energy, industry, tourism, education, and training sectors, with major European companies participating in strategic projects like the Riyadh Metro.
Sectors of common priority
The ambassador explained that the energy sector, especially renewable energy and green hydrogen, represents a common priority, amidst the global shift towards sustainability, in addition to significant opportunities in the high-tech manufacturing sector, industrial localization, and knowledge transfer.
He pointed to the growing interest of European investors in Saudi Arabia’s tourism sector, driven by Vision 2030’s targets to raise tourism’s contribution to the gross domestic product to 10 percent.
Wide opportunities stand out in areas of hospitality, tourist destination management, cultural tourism, transport, and sustainability, especially in major projects like NEOM, AlUla, the Red Sea Project, and Diriyah.
Farnaud cited existing partnerships with leading European companies such as Accor and Kempinski, in addition to French cooperation in developing AlUla as a global heritage and tourist site.
RIYADH: Global investors can find a “safe harbor” in the Gulf Cooperation Council as the bloc’s public-private partnerships pipeline offers “compelling” opportunities, according to a new report.
The latest document from the Future Investment Initiative Institute highlights how economies in the region are currently driving the next wave of PPP growth.
It cites findings from Partnerships Bulletin, which ranks Saudi Arabia as second in the global emerging markets pipeline for PPP projects up to July 2025, and also places Dubai in the top 10.
While that analysis claims the Kingdom has 98 PPP projects either formally published or announced, FII says Saudi Arabia has a further 200 currently awaiting approval.
The findings align with the goals outlined in the Kingdom’s National Privatization Strategy, launched in January, which aims to raise satisfaction levels with public services across 18 target sectors, create tens of thousands of specialized jobs, and exceed 220 PPP contracts by 2030.
The strategy also aims to increase private sector capital investments to more than SR240 billion ($63.99 billion) by 2030.
The FII report says that around 90 percent of FDI into Saudi Arabia now flows into non-oil sectors, from advanced manufacturing and tourism to green energy and digital infrastructure.
“That shift reflects deliberate policy choices to open markets, standardize regulatory frameworks and use public capital to de-risk new value chains,” says the document, adding: “The result is a kind of safe harbor in an otherwise low-growth, high-uncertainty world.”
It continues: “While global FDI has stagnated or declined in many regions, the GCC’s pipeline of planned infrastructure and industrial projects now exceeds $2.5 trillion, according to Boston Consulting Group data, with PPPs playing a central role in structuring and financing them. For global investors searching for yield, diversification and inflation-linked income, this represents a compelling proposition.”
Commenting on the FII Institute report, Sally Menassa, partner at international management consulting firm Arthur D. Little, said PPPs are a strategic necessity for delivering infrastructure at speed and scale, and described Saudi Arabia’s pipeline as a “powerful execution and financing tool.”
She added: “The Kingdom’s PPP momentum must remain focused on impact, value creation and execution excellence. PPPs should not be viewed merely as a funding mechanism, but as a structural tool to enhance infrastructure performance, attract investment and support sustainable economic growth in line with Vision 2030.”
Menassa said that Saudi Arabia’s National Privitization Strategy marks a shift from a project-by-project approach to institutionalization of efforts and value creation.
“By clarifying sector priorities, strengthening project selection criteria, and formalizing governance and investor pathways, the Strategy reduces uncertainty. This clarity enhances investor confidence and improves pipeline quality,” said the Arthur D. Little official.
Sally Menassa, partner at international management consulting firm Arthur D. Little. Supplied.
She added: “PPP and privatization efforts in Saudi Arabia are not about divestment or the state shifting execution to the private sector, it is really about becoming more productive as a nation. It enhances efficiency, raises service standards, mobilizes private and SME participation, and attracts capital.”
Menassa further said that the strategy could help the Kingdom achieve stronger fiscal sustainability and higher private sector GDP contribution, both of which are critical components to accelerate the Kingdom’s economic transformation under Vision 2030.
Vijay Valecha, chief investment officer at Century Financial, believes input from the private sector across all stages, from design to construction and operations, improves the efficiency of project delivery and long-term operations in Saudi Arabia.
“Tighter governance through centralized management at the National Center for Privatization and PPP and a more streamlined process, including template contracts, a clearer regulatory environment, and a transparent pipeline, is likely to improve delivery speed,” said Valecha.
He added: “This means faster delivery of big projects like Red Sea resorts or Neom, with private firms handling operations to drive innovation. Ultimately, the strategy supercharges diversification by making the private sector the main engine of growth, aligning perfectly with Saudi Arabia’s push for a vibrant, non-oil economy.”
The FII Institute added that the global flow of FDI is increasingly concentrated in the Gulf Cooperation Council region, driven by ambitious national transformation agendas and deep pools of sovereign wealth.
Tony Hallside, CEO of STP Partners, outlined several factors that are boosting the PPP landscape in the region, which include large infrastructure demand from Vision-level programs and urbanization.
“Government frameworks that standardise PPP procurement are making projects bankable. Strong regional capital pools and sovereign support will mitigate risk and attract global players. In the GCC, Saudi Arabia’s pipeline itself is one of the largest in the Middle East, indicating strong investor interest,” added Hallside.
Underscoring the role of growing PPP in Saudi Arabia, the FII report said: “A decade ago, the Kingdom’s solar capacity was negligible, despite its vast solar resource. Through early anchor investments, long-term power purchase agreements and support for national champions, the state seeded a competitive renewables market that now attracts global players on purely commercial terms.”
Valecha said that clearer PPP laws, standardised contracts and dedicated PPP units have reduced execution risks and made projects more bankable for global infrastructure funds and developers in the GCC region.
He added that rapid urbanization, a young and growing population, rising data center power demand and energy transition projects create predictable, long-duration cash flows in the region.
“This combination of policy support, fiscal necessity and structural growth is why the GCC is emerging as one of the fastest-growing PPP markets globally,” said Valecha.
Vijay Valecha, chief investment officer at Century Financial. Supplied
Key Saudi PPP projects
Yanbu 4 Independent Water Project - supplying water to Medina and Makkah
Location Yanbu, Red Sea coast
Companies involved: Engie, Mowah, Nesma, Saudi Water Partnership Co.
Cost: $826.5 million
Expected delivery date: Operational as of 2024
Hadda Independent Sewage Treatment Plant
Location: Makkah Province
Companies involved: Metito Utilities, Etihad Water and Electricity, SkyBridge Limited Co., Saudi Water Partnership Co.
Expected delivery date: 2028
As Sufun Solar PV Independent Power Project
Location: Hail region
Companies involved: TotalEnergies, Aljomaih Energy & Water, Saudi Power Procurement Co.
Expected delivery date: Expected to connect to the grid in 2027
Construction of greenfield international airports
Location: Taif, Abha, Qassim, and Hail
Companies involved: Currently in the planning stage; investors are being sought
One-Stop Station Project
Location: Intercity road network across the Kingdom
Companies involved: Saudi Arabia’s Roads General Authority and National Center for Privatization & Public-Private Partnership announced a full list of qualified bidders in February.
King Salman Park
Location: Riyadh
Companies involved: King Salman Park Foundation, Ajdan Real Estate, Sedco Capital
Cost: $1 billion
Project: Madinah-3, Buraydah-2, and Tabuk-2 Independent Sewage Treatment Plants
Location: Madinah, Buraydah, and Tabuk
Companies involved: Acciona Agua, Tawzea, Tamasuk, Saudi Water Partnership Co.
Cost: $627 million combined
Riyadh Metro Line 2 Extension
Location: Riyadh
Companies involved: Royal Commission for Riyadh City, Arriyadh New Mobility Consortium, led by Webuild. Riyadh Metro Transit Consultants (JV between US Parsons and France’s Egis and Systra) as project management and construction supervision consultant.
Cost: Up to $900 million
Expected delivery date: 2032
The crucial role of emerging markets
According to the FII Institute report, the ability to deliver resilient infrastructure, expand digital connectivity and accelerate the energy transition will increasingly depend on the strength and legitimacy of PPPs, as fiscal space tightens and investment needs rise.
FII estimates a $5 trillion global infrastructure financing gap by 2040. It also points to significant regional shortfalls, including an estimated $3.7 trillion gap in the US and an annual $130 billion to $170 billion gap across Africa. In this context, PPPs are moving from a transactional procurement route to a central model for financing and delivery.
The report highlighted that emerging markets, including Saudi Arabia, are currently driving the next wave of PPP growth, with spending across low-and middle-income countries reaching $100.7 billion in 2024, up 16 percent year on year, according to figures from the World Bank.
Moreover, emerging markets now represent around 61 percent of global PPP activity by gross domestic product share.
According to Partnerships Bulletin’s findings up to July 31 2025, the Philippines leads the emerging-market pipeline with 230 projects, followed by Saudi Arabia with 98, Kyrgyzstan with 80, Bangladesh with 71, and Peru with 54 projects.
Greece has 42 projects in the pipeline, followed by Dubai at 28, Kenya at 25, Colombia at 24, and Pakistan at 14.
PPP: An engine of growth
When capital was cheap, PPPs were often treated as an optional extra – a way to shift specific projects off the public balance sheet, or to import private-sector efficiency into construction and operations, the FII report said.
However, now, nations consider PPPs as a central hub of their economic strategy, as they enable the state to stretch every dollar of public investment using private capital, while retaining strategic control over what gets built, where and to what standard.
“The real differentiator is complexity. When a project presents significant financial uncertainty or unpredictable demand, or if there’s a high level of climate exposure or technological risk, a PPP can give leaders the tools to manage those issues without slowing things down,” said Bob Willen, global managing partner and chairman of Kearney, said in the FII report.
Erik Ringvold, chief business development officer at Regional Voluntary Carbon Market Co., was quoted in the report as saying that carbon markets will benefit through PPPs, as deepened public-private partnerships could help achieve progress toward national emissions targets, while simultaneously creating economic opportunity and catalyzing new green industries.
“Saudi Arabia has made large strides toward an emissions compliance system, with an operational carbon standard in place, and an emissions trading system announced to be launched over the coming few years,” said Ringvold.
He added: “At VCM, we see a clear future carbon vision for Saudi Arabia. One ecosystem. One marketplace. One iconic collaboration – with the PPP model at the heart of its success.”
PPPs for investors and citizens
For investors, infrastructure-backed PPPs offer long-duration, often inflation-linked cash flows at a time when public markets are volatile and dominated by a narrow set of mega-cap technology stocks.
For citizens, well-designed PPPs can mean better services, more resilient infrastructure and faster progress toward climate and development goals, without unsustainable tax rises or austerity.
FII, however, cautioned that public consent is becoming decisive. Across seven countries, only 23 percent of citizens agree that PPPs “equally benefit everyone”, compared with 41 percent of business and government leaders.
Tony Hallside, CEO of STP Partners. Supplied
Hallside said that public consent hinges on transparency, accountability, and visible service outcomes.
He added that governments should publish clear procurement frameworks, communicate cost-benefit and performance expectations in plain language, and measure user satisfaction and service quality over time — “reinforcing that PPPs deliver tangible improvements in infrastructure and services.”
Menassa echoed similar views and said that communication with the public is not sufficient, but the performance and execution phase holds the key to PPP projects.
“Winning public opinion for PPPs is rather a marathon not a race. It starts with building awareness and trust by providing transparency and demonstrating value for money, ensuring affordability and service quality of public services is maintained through strong regulatory oversight, and ensuring competitive, transparent procurement processes,” added Menassa.
According to the Arthur D. Little official, the public must see tangible improvements in service reliability, efficiency and accountability, and acceptance will follow.
“The world can’t afford to delay the infrastructure and energy transition investments that will determine prosperity – and planetary stability – for decades to come. Nor can it fund them through public budgets alone. Financing the future is, by definition, a joint endeavour,” added the FII report.