Skip to main content

Saudi Arabian transport infrastructure deals

A series of Saudi Arabian transport infrastructure deals will move ahead.
By MJ Woof December 11, 2020 Read time: 1 min
New transport infrastructure is being planned for Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea tourism project – image courtesy of © Indos82, Dreamstime.com
A series of infrastructure works will be carried out in Saudi Arabia. A package of works worth US$2 billion is being handled by Red Sea Development. A significant portion of the contracts for the construction of the project have already been awarded to local firms.

Work on the Red Sea tourism project commenced in early 2019. The plans call for the construction of a new road network.

Meanwhile a firm in the UAE, DuBox Precast Products Industrial, is establishing a site that will supply the precast components required for the new transport links.

According to the firm, the Red Sea Project is an ambitious tourism development, offering a site that includes an archipelago of more than 90 islands, sweeping desert, mountain landscapes and 200km of coastline. The new transport infrastructure required includes the construction of a new airport.

Related Content

  • Three Texan road contracts
    June 21, 2022
    Three Texan road contracts are underway.
  • UAE setting construction agenda
    May 25, 2012
    Talks are now underway again for the US$3 billion Bahrain-Qatar Causeway project, which was delayed largely due to the financial crisis. Work on the 40km causeway project, which is intended to feature both road and rail connections, stopped in June of this year. The project is being handled by a consortium headed by Qatari Diar Real Estate Investment Company (QDREIC) and French firm Vinci Construction. Under the original plan the road links were due to be completed by 2013 and the rail connections by 2015,
  • Bidding for $17 billion Iraq-Turkey road project
    August 5, 2025
    Bidding will commence in late 2025 for the $17 billion Iraq-Turkey road project.
  • Ethiopia’s challenging cement market: consumption stimulation
    January 26, 2018
    Ethiopia’s cement industry has enjoyed substantial growth in the past decade. However, challenges linked to the government’s investment policy could erode these gains, as Shem Oirere reports With nearly 16.5 million tonnes of cement capacity and 10% average growth in annual consumption, Ethiopia is among the top cement producers in sub-Saharan Africa. Only Nigeria and South Africa rival it.