Joint venture wins design deal for Saudi maritime yard

Updated 12 October 2016
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Joint venture wins design deal for Saudi maritime yard

JEDDAH: A joint venture of HaskoningDHV UK and Hyundai Engineering & Construction Co. has been awarded a contract to design the infrastructure for the Ras Al-Khair maritime yard in Saudi Arabia, a statement from the firms said.
The duo, based in the Netherlands and South Korea, have been awarded the front-end engineering design contract, with the work expected to take five months to complete, they said.
The huge ship repair and shipbuilding complex in the east of the country is due to be fully operational by 2021.
Saudi Aramco has said it expects the complex to create 80,000 jobs and allow Saudi Arabia to reduce its imports by $12 billion while increasing gross domestic product by $17 billion.


Emerging markets should depend less on external funding, says Nigeria finance minister

Updated 10 February 2026
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Emerging markets should depend less on external funding, says Nigeria finance minister

RIYADH: Developing economies must rely less on external financing as high global interest rates and geopolitical tensions continue to strain public finances, Nigeria’s finance minister told Al-Eqtisadiah.

Asked how Nigeria is responding to rising global interest rates and conflicts between major powers such as the US and China, Wale Edun said that current conditions require developing countries to rethink traditional financing models.

“I think what it means for countries like Nigeria, other African countries, and even other developing countries is that we have to rely less on others and more on our own resources, on our own devices,” he said on the sidelines of the AlUla Conference for Emerging Market Economies.

He added: “We have to trade more with each other, we have to cooperate and invest in each other.” 

Edun emphasized the importance of mobilizing domestic resources, particularly savings, to support investment and long-term economic development.

According to Edun, rising debt servicing costs are placing an increasing burden on developing economies, limiting their ability to fund growth and social programs.

“In an environment where developing countries as a whole — what we are paying in debt service, what we are paying in terms of interest costs and repayments of our debt — is more than we are receiving in what we call overseas development assistance, and it is more than even investments by wealthy countries in our economies,” he said.

Edun added that countries in the Global South are increasingly recognizing the need for deeper regional integration.

His comments reflect growing concern among developing nations that elevated borrowing costs and global instability are reshaping development finance, accelerating a shift toward domestic resource mobilization and stronger economic ties among emerging markets.