Discussion:
Saudi Arabia preparing for days of 'no more oil'
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(ಠ_ಠ)
2014-12-12 01:15:40 UTC
Permalink
Unlike those dumb countries which have even less of it and are making no major
plans for diversification. Harper, are you listening ?
_________________________________________________

December 11, 2014 - Globe and Mail

Saudi Arabia's massive economic-diversification experiment


Country aims to lessen its reliance on oil by building a new, sprawling
$100-billion city

Ground Zero of Saudi Arabia's race to end its overwhelming dependence on one
product – oil – looks like the opening phase of a resort development. Palm
trees line the beach, a canal has been dredged and a luxury hotel and a few
condos have popped up between empty spaces filled with earth-moving machinery.

But divert your eyes away from the brilliant blue-green Red Sea and look north,
and you will spot the outline of gigantic cranes and container ships. It is the
new deep-water harbour attached to King Abdullah Economic City (KAEC), the
world's only city that is publicly traded. Extensions to the harbour will make
it one of the world's 10 largest container ports. Nearby is a cluster of
low-slung buildings, one of which is a $200-million (U.S.) factory pumping out
Galaxy chocolate bars made by the American confectionery giant Mars.

By local standards, KAEC is a revolution, an economic experiment that is the
equivalent of a Saudi moon shot. No non-oil investment of this scale – a city
the size of Washington – has ever been attempted in Saudi Arabia. The
investment cost over the next 25 years or so is estimated at $100-billion, with
absolutely every component, from the port and the high-speed rail connection to
the regulatory and governance systems, being built from the ground up.

In an interview with The Globe and Mail at the Cityquest new cities conference
this week at KAEC, Abdullatif Al-Othman, the former Saudi Aramco executive who
is governor of the Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority, said the recent
plunge in oil prices gives the economic diversification plans more urgency.

"Oil has been a good source of income, but we all know it is a depleting
resource," he said.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"The cyclicality of that resource reinforces our strategy and our commitment to
diversifying the economy."

It is impossible to overstate Saudi Arabia's reliance on oil – the kingdom is a
one-product wonder. About 80 per cent of government income is reliant on oil,
and 90 per cent of export earnings. The country is responsible for about
one-third of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries' output and is
the cartel's "swing producer," meaning its ability to open or tighten the
spigot can send prices soaring or plunging.

At last month's OPEC meeting in Vienna, the decision by the Saudi-dominated
cartel not to reduce the 30-million-barrel-a-day production quota sent prices
to a five-year low. In June, Brent crude, the effective international
benchmark, was trading at about $110 a barrel. By Wednesday, it was trading at
$66. In 2008, when oil peaked at $147, Saudi Arabia was swimming in cash and
became the 19th-largest economy.

Today, the picture could not be more different. The International Monetary
Fund, Deutsche Bank and other sources estimate that Saudi Arabia needs about
$93 oil to balance its budget as it ramps up post-Arab Spring social spending.
(Iran at $140 and Qatar at $65 represent the budget-clearing extremes.)
While the country appears to have ample financial flexibility – its debt to
gross domestic product is about 3 per cent, a small fraction of the euro zone's
90 per cent – there is no doubt that extended low prices will hurt is ability
to spend and might even unleash growth-crunching austerity.

Last year, even before prices began to fall, the Saudi monarchy was on the
receiving end of warnings about the perils of overreliance on oil. The
highest-profile criticism came from billionaire Prince al-Waleed bin Talal,
owner of Kingdom Holding, whose investments include the Four Seasons and
Fairmont hotel groups, and nephew of Saudi King Abdullah. "We are still a
nation on oil and this is wrong and dangerous. We've been talking about
diversifying Saudi Arabia's revenue ... for almost 30 years and not relying on
oil. You know, Eisenhower said plans have no value, implementation does."

His warning came when oil was well above $100. Last month, in an open letter
posted on his website, he said Saudi Arabia's apparent tolerance for low prices
would be "catastrophic" for the Saudi economy.

Saudi Arabia is diversifying the economy, just not nearly as quickly as some
would like. KAEC is one of four new "economic" cities scattered around the
country. The Saudi stock market company controlling the development is called
Emaar Economic City, whose chairman is Mohamed Alabbar of Abu Dhabi. He is the
founder and chairman of Emaar Properties, one of the world's biggest
developers, best known for Dubai's Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest tower.
Its initial public offering was the biggest in Saudi history.

At the Cityquest conference, Mr. Alabbar said he was confident KAEC would
succeed. "The potential for growth in this country is huge, the market
opportunity is huge," he said, noting that the Middle East in general was his
company's most profitable global market.

KAEC was launched in 2005, ground to a halt during the financial crisis, when
its future came into doubt, and is now building momentum again. It is no more
than 10 per cent built, but already its basic outline and components are
visible. It is located about 100 kilometres north of Jeddah, the country's
commercial capital, and smack in the middle of the Red Sea shipping route that,
through the Suez Canal, connects Asia to the Mediterranean and Europe. KAEC
will eventually be home to two million residents.

It has been redesigned several times, the last time when Fahd Al-Rasheed, Emaar
Economic City's CEO, found himself trapped in New York during Hurricane Sandy.
The hurricane's water deluge convinced him to eliminate the network of canals
and move the city well back from the Red Sea. "Creating a city from scratch is
not easy," he said.

The project is vast and the low-density planning ensures seemingly endless
sprawl, raising questions about its sustainability, since high-density cities
tend to be more energy efficient. But Saudi Arabia has cheap energy and vast
open spaces, so constructing a tight city that discourages cars was not a
priority. Solar-panel installations are not part of the master plan.
High-speed rail lines that will connect KAEC to Jeddah and the holy cities of
Medina and Mecca – with some components of the trains coming from Canada's
Bombardier.

Commercially, KAEC will be anchored by the port, light manufacturing connected
to the national rail and road network, and the downtown centre that will cater
to tourists and the services industry. The coastal area will be largely
residential. In effect, it will become one of the new breed of city states
that are being built in the hundreds all over the world as urbanization lures
hundreds of million of people into cities. London's Llewellyn Consulting says
the population of cities will rise to five billion in 2030 from 3.9 billion today.

Will KAEC work? Barring a total and prolonged collapse in the oil price, which
might push Saudi Arabia into recession, the Saudi government is counting on it.
"We want to have a multicylinder economy," said Mr. Al-Otham, the Saudi
investment boss, with the caveat that leaving the project largely to the
private sector "requires patient capital."
Alan Baker
2014-12-12 01:50:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by (ಠ_ಠ)
Unlike those dumb countries which have even less of it and are making
no major plans for diversification. Harper, are you listening ?
Wow.

Way to utterly miss the point.
Post by (ಠ_ಠ)
_________________________________________________
December 11, 2014 - Globe and Mail
Saudi Arabia's massive economic-diversification experiment
Country aims to lessen its reliance on oil by building a new, sprawling
$100-billion city
Ground Zero of Saudi Arabia's race to end its overwhelming dependence
on one product – oil – looks like the opening phase of a resort
development. Palm trees line the beach, a canal has been dredged and a
luxury hotel and a few condos have popped up between empty spaces
filled with earth-moving machinery.
But divert your eyes away from the brilliant blue-green Red Sea and
look north, and you will spot the outline of gigantic cranes and
container ships. It is the new deep-water harbour attached to King
Abdullah Economic City (KAEC), the world's only city that is publicly
traded. Extensions to the harbour will make it one of the world's 10
largest container ports. Nearby is a cluster of low-slung buildings,
one of which is a $200-million (U.S.) factory pumping out Galaxy
chocolate bars made by the American confectionery giant Mars.
By local standards, KAEC is a revolution, an economic experiment that
is the equivalent of a Saudi moon shot. No non-oil investment of this
scale – a city the size of Washington – has ever been attempted in
Saudi Arabia. The investment cost over the next 25 years or so is
estimated at $100-billion, with absolutely every component, from the
port and the high-speed rail connection to the regulatory and
governance systems, being built from the ground up.
In an interview with The Globe and Mail at the Cityquest new cities
conference this week at KAEC, Abdullatif Al-Othman, the former Saudi
Aramco executive who is governor of the Saudi Arabian General
Investment Authority, said the recent plunge in oil prices gives the
economic diversification plans more urgency.
"Oil has been a good source of income, but we all know it is a
depleting resource," he said.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"The cyclicality of that resource reinforces our strategy and our
commitment to diversifying the economy."
It is impossible to overstate Saudi Arabia's reliance on oil – the
kingdom is a one-product wonder. About 80 per cent of government
income is reliant on oil, and 90 per cent of export earnings. The
country is responsible for about one-third of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries' output and is the cartel's "swing
producer," meaning its ability to open or tighten the spigot can send
prices soaring or plunging.
At last month's OPEC meeting in Vienna, the decision by the
Saudi-dominated cartel not to reduce the 30-million-barrel-a-day
production quota sent prices to a five-year low. In June, Brent crude,
the effective international benchmark, was trading at about $110 a
barrel. By Wednesday, it was trading at $66. In 2008, when oil peaked
at $147, Saudi Arabia was swimming in cash and became the 19th-largest
economy.
Today, the picture could not be more different. The International
Monetary Fund, Deutsche Bank and other sources estimate that Saudi
Arabia needs about $93 oil to balance its budget as it ramps up
post-Arab Spring social spending. (Iran at $140 and Qatar at $65
represent the budget-clearing extremes.) While the country appears to
have ample financial flexibility – its debt to gross domestic product
is about 3 per cent, a small fraction of the euro zone's 90 per cent
– there is no doubt that extended low prices will hurt is ability to
spend and might even unleash growth-crunching austerity.
Last year, even before prices began to fall, the Saudi monarchy was on
the receiving end of warnings about the perils of overreliance on oil.
The highest-profile criticism came from billionaire Prince al-Waleed
bin Talal, owner of Kingdom Holding, whose investments include the Four
Seasons and Fairmont hotel groups, and nephew of Saudi King Abdullah.
"We are still a nation on oil and this is wrong and dangerous. We've
been talking about diversifying Saudi Arabia's revenue ... for almost
30 years and not relying on oil. You know, Eisenhower said plans have
no value, implementation does."
His warning came when oil was well above $100. Last month, in an open
letter posted on his website, he said Saudi Arabia's apparent tolerance
for low prices would be "catastrophic" for the Saudi economy.
Saudi Arabia is diversifying the economy, just not nearly as quickly as
some would like. KAEC is one of four new "economic" cities scattered
around the country. The Saudi stock market company controlling the
development is called Emaar Economic City, whose chairman is Mohamed
Alabbar of Abu Dhabi. He is the founder and chairman of Emaar
Properties, one of the world's biggest developers, best known for
Dubai's Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest tower. Its initial public
offering was the biggest in Saudi history.
At the Cityquest conference, Mr. Alabbar said he was confident KAEC
would succeed. "The potential for growth in this country is huge, the
market opportunity is huge," he said, noting that the Middle East in
general was his company's most profitable global market.
KAEC was launched in 2005, ground to a halt during the financial
crisis, when its future came into doubt, and is now building momentum
again. It is no more than 10 per cent built, but already its basic
outline and components are visible. It is located about 100 kilometres
north of Jeddah, the country's commercial capital, and smack in the
middle of the Red Sea shipping route that, through the Suez Canal,
connects Asia to the Mediterranean and Europe. KAEC will eventually be
home to two million residents.
It has been redesigned several times, the last time when Fahd
Al-Rasheed, Emaar Economic City's CEO, found himself trapped in New
York during Hurricane Sandy. The hurricane's water deluge convinced
him to eliminate the network of canals and move the city well back from
the Red Sea. "Creating a city from scratch is not easy," he said.
The project is vast and the low-density planning ensures seemingly
endless sprawl, raising questions about its sustainability, since
high-density cities tend to be more energy efficient. But Saudi Arabia
has cheap energy and vast open spaces, so constructing a tight city
that discourages cars was not a priority. Solar-panel installations
are not part of the master plan. High-speed rail lines that will
connect KAEC to Jeddah and the holy cities of Medina and Mecca – with
some components of the trains coming from Canada's Bombardier.
Commercially, KAEC will be anchored by the port, light manufacturing
connected to the national rail and road network, and the downtown
centre that will cater to tourists and the services industry. The
coastal area will be largely residential. In effect, it will become
one of the new breed of city states that are being built in the
hundreds all over the world as urbanization lures hundreds of million
of people into cities. London's Llewellyn Consulting says the
population of cities will rise to five billion in 2030 from 3.9 billion
today.
Will KAEC work? Barring a total and prolonged collapse in the oil
price, which might push Saudi Arabia into recession, the Saudi
government is counting on it. "We want to have a multicylinder
economy," said Mr. Al-Otham, the Saudi investment boss, with the caveat
that leaving the project largely to the private sector "requires
patient capital."
cloud dreamer
2014-12-12 13:45:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by (ಠ_ಠ)
Unlike those dumb countries which have even less of it and are making no
major plans for diversification. Harper, are you listening ?
_________________________________________________
December 11, 2014 - Globe and Mail
Saudi Arabia's massive economic-diversification experiment
Country aims to lessen its reliance on oil by building a new, sprawling
$100-billion city
Ground Zero of Saudi Arabia's race to end its overwhelming dependence on
one product – oil – looks like the opening phase of a resort
development. Palm trees line the beach, a canal has been dredged and a
luxury hotel and a few condos have popped up between empty spaces filled
with earth-moving machinery.
Given it's almost all desert, it has the space to produce enough solar
energy to power the globe. Imagine what it could do for the region.


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