Al Habtoor Group to exit Lebanon, after announcing legal action over $1.7bn in losses

Al Habtoor City Beirut Hotel. alhabtoorcitybeirut.com
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Updated 28 January 2026
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Al Habtoor Group to exit Lebanon, after announcing legal action over $1.7bn in losses

  • Termination of contracts for all employees in the country
  • Group cites deterioration of conditions, persistent institutional failures, and no meaningful or structural solutions

RIYADH: Al Habtoor Group will permanently close all operations in Lebanon, it has announced, citing prolonged instability, hostile campaigns, and failed negotiations with the Lebanese government.

The decision marks the end of the Group’s 25-year presence in the country, which began with the opening of its first hotel in 2001. The closure will result in the termination of contracts for all employees in the country.

In an official statement, the Dubai-based group said that the decision comes against the backdrop of “prolonged instability, ongoing hostile campaigns, public attacks, and defamatory actions directed at the Group and its businesses, as well as the broader legal proceedings currently underway between the Group and the Lebanese Government.”

The statement added: “The cumulative impact of these factors has rendered the continuation of operations unsustainable at this time.”

The Group acknowledged the “human and professional implications” of its decision, and it came following a “long history of resilience and commitment.”

The statement added: “Throughout years marked by successive wars and crises, the Group absorbed substantial operational and financial burdens, honoured its obligations to its employees, and treated this period as a humanitarian responsibility before a commercial one, despite the absence of effective state decision-making and the failure to provide the minimum levels of stability and protection required.”

It said this approach was “no longer viable”, adding: “As conditions continue to deteriorate, institutional failure persists, and no meaningful or structural solutions emerge to address the underlying deficiencies, Al Habtoor Group finds itself compelled to make the decision to cease its operations in Lebanon and halt the ongoing financial drain, and proceed with the termination of all employees.” 

Al Habtoor Group’s portfolio in Lebanon consists of two hotels in the capital, the Metropolitan Palace Hotel Beirut and the Al Habtoor Grand Hotel Beirut.

These are operated as a single complex known as “Al Habtoor City Beirut” due to their adjacent locations and connecting bridge. According to a publicly available document from 2011, the Al Habtoor Grand Hotel Beirut employed 250 people at that point.

Earlier in January, the Group posted a recruitment announcement on its official LinkedIn page saying: “Al Habtoor City Beirut is looking for passionate and service-oriented professionals to join our growing team.” 

In a post on his LinkedIn page earlier this month, the Cluster General Manager of Al Habtoor City in Beirut, Omar Saade, highlighted 2025’s achievements and stated: “Looking forward to building on this momentum as we prepare for an exciting 2026.”

Earlier this week, the group said it will move forward with legal action against the country after years of unresolved investment disputes and mounting losses of $1.7 billion linked to banking restrictions and state inaction.

In a statement, the group said its assets suffered “severe and sustained harm” due to measures imposed by Lebanese authorities and the Banque du Liban, which prevented access to and transfer of lawfully deposited funds. The resulting losses were compounded by Lebanon’s political, economic, and institutional collapse.

“These enormous losses are not limited to the unlawful deprivation of access to the Group’s funds in the Lebanese banks, but also arise from the broader collapse of institutional stability,” a statement issued on Monday said.

In 2024, the group formally notified the Lebanese government of an investment dispute through an international law firm, triggering a six-month cooling-off period as prescribed under the UAE-Lebanon Bilateral Investment Treaty, in force since 1999.

Despite what it called “sustained good-faith efforts,” no meaningful progress was made. “Investor protection is not discretionary, it is a fundamental obligation under international law,” the group emphasized.

The legal escalation follows public warnings from Group Chairman Khalaf Al-Habtoor in late 2023. In a December 2023 interview with Arab News, he stated the group was prepared to withdraw entirely and pursue international legal remedies if protections were not restored.


How mining can transform Saudi Arabia’s economy

Updated 07 March 2026
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How mining can transform Saudi Arabia’s economy

  • Kingdom’s mineral wealth valued at $2.5tn, positioning mining as a third pillar of the national economy

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia is accelerating its push into mining as part of its economic transformation under Vision 2030, amid the growing importance of critical minerals and rare earths.

The Kingdom’s mineral wealth is valued at $2.5 trillion, positioning mining as a third pillar of the national economy alongside hydrocarbons.

The mining industry could give Saudi Arabia an edge in transition minerals and supply chains by expanding extraction, processing and the logistics needed to move materials to market, according to economists and industry specialists.

Saudi Arabia is home to more than 45 identified minerals, including gold, copper and uranium, according to the Vision 2030 strategy.

Momentum has been supported by measures aimed at making mining easier to invest in and faster to scale, including updated regulations, digital licensing platforms, specialized mining services, and new transport and rail links to mining areas.

Vision 2030 aims to raise mining’s contribution to gross domestic product to SR240 billion ($63 billion) by 2030, create 200,000 direct and indirect jobs, and attract $27 billion in new investment, according to published government targets.

Signs of progress are starting to show in the mining sector in terms of exploration activity, licensing and new discoveries.

“The mining strategy shows it’s working very well, evidenced by the rapid rise in exploration and industrial licenses, and major new mineral discoveries,” Talat Hafiz, an economist and financial analyst, told Arab News.

Saudi Arabia is undertaking the world’s largest geological survey, covering about 700,000 sq. km of the Arabian Shield for $1.5 billion, he said. 

The number of mining licenses issued exceeds 2,000, according to official data, and the Kingdom’s mineral wealth is valued at 90 percent higher than it was in 2016 when Vision 2030 was rolled out.

A key milestone highlighted in Vision 2030’s mining strategy was the introduction of a new mining investment law, which reduced the tax rate to 20 percent from 45 percent to spur investment and align the sector with global standards.

The Kingdom’s mining resources position it well to be a critical supplier of raw materials that are integral to energy transition as clean-energy technologies require large volumes of mined materials.

Copper is central to electrification and power networks, while battery supply chains rely on minerals such as nickel and lithium. Phosphate is a key industrial input with wider economic value.

Reliable supplies of metals and minerals used in power grids, batteries and electric vehicles can attract investment and support downstream industry in the Kingdom.

Saudi Arabia’s Jabal Sayid site, northeast of Jeddah, ranks among the world’s top four resources for rare earth elements, Khalid Al-Mudaifer, vice minister of industry and mineral resources for mining affairs, recently told Al Eqtisadiah.

It will help meet Saudi Arabia’s needs for minerals used in magnet manufacturing, EVs and wind energy, while also supporting global supply, including the US market, he said.

Mining can also catalyze investment in the Kingdom, widen supply-chain employment, and boost non-oil exports and private-sector growth, according to economists and policymakers.

Mines, processing plants and the infrastructure around them require large upfront capital spending, creating a pipeline of work across construction, equipment, utilities and logistics. 

The mining industry could give Saudi Arabia an edge in transition minerals and supply chains by expanding extraction, processing and the logistics needed to move materials to market. (Shutterstock)

“When a mining sector scales, the economic footprint extends well beyond extraction,” said Turki Al-Nahari, vice president of global mining at Ecolab, told Arab News. “Growth typically occurs across engineering services, industrial water management, logistics, laboratory testing, equipment reliability, environmental services and digital performance systems.

“That shift creates demand for skilled engineers, technicians, data analysts and operational specialists,” he added.

In 2025, Saudi Arabia’s mining exploration budget increased 600 percent to $146 million from $21 million in 2022.

“This growth is driven by ongoing geological surveys, technological advancements and higher exploitation budgets, all of which signal stability and opportunity, attracting foreign investment,” Manraj Lamba, a mining economics analyst at S&P Global, said in a recent report.

Mining projects are easier to finance when the size and quality of the deposit are clear, costs are competitive, and rules and taxes are stable, Abdullah Al-Harbi, an economist familiar with the industry, told Arab News.

Investors want solid feasibility work, credible timelines and evidence a project can stay profitable through swings in commodity prices, Al-Harbi said.

Saudi Arabia’s pipeline includes 24 exploration-stage projects and 17 more advanced developments, according to S&P Global.

“Its proactive approach to geological surveys and resource assessment has uncovered significant potential across gold, copper, phosphate and bauxite,” Lamba said.

Large projects also tend to generate employment across a wider industrial supply chain, including contractors, maintenance, laboratories, transport and a range of operational services.

To boost employment and support hiring and training, Saudi Arabia has moved to standardize job roles and skills for the mining industry. 

HIGHLIGHT

Vision 2030 aims to raise mining’s contribution to gross domestic product to SR240 billion ($63 billion) by 2030, create 200,000 direct and indirect jobs, and attract $27 billion in new investment.

The Kingdom rolled out a framework related to employment and skills in the mining industry in January at the Global Labor Market Conference.

The framework is “a tool which ensures clear definitions of occupations and their required skills,” the Kingdom’s Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Bandar Al-Khorayef said. It will cover more than 500 job roles, detail the necessary skills, responsibilities and titles, he added.

Exports from the sector are already rising in tandem with investments to develop the industry and create jobs.

Saudi Arabia exported 5.7 million tonnes of phosphate fertilizer in 2024, up about 6 percent from 2023, according to a GASTAT report.

As the energy transition accelerates, Saudi Arabia’s advantage may be strongest beyond extraction alone.

“Saudi Arabia’s most realistic advantage in the accelerating energy transition lies in combining selective mining with strong processing and refining capabilities, supported by its emerging role as a logistics and supply-chain hub,” Hafiz said.

The Kingdom’s position between Africa, Europe, and Asia favors downstream processing and value-added industries, he added.

“Saudi Arabia is prioritizing minerals that are both financeable and strategically aligned with emerging industries such as electric vehicles and clean energy technologies, where markets are clear, and demand is scalable,” Hafiz said.

Aluminum, phosphate, and similar commodities remain a key focus to support local manufacturing, infrastructure development and downstream industries while strengthening export capacity, he said.

“Once construction concludes, the priority shifts to operational stability and performance optimization,” Al-Nahari said.

“Small efficiency gains, applied consistently across large-scale operations, compound materially over time,” influencing cost as well as uptime and competitiveness over the life of a mine, he added.

As the global race toward electrification and decarbonization accelerates, the Kingdom is effectively positioning itself beyond its oil legacy with its strategic commitment to the minerals sector, which will play a critical role in powering the future.

Its investment in exploration, infrastructure, and downstream processing anchor it as a pivotal supplier in the critical minerals and rare earths value chain in the era of energy transition.