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  • Saudi-Israel Ties Depend on Steps Toward a Palestinian State, Blinken Says

    Antony J. Blinken, the U.S. secretary of state, and a Saudi ambassador asserted on Tuesday the possibility of diplomatic recognition of Israel by Saudi Arabia if the Israeli government alleviates the suffering of residents of Gaza and puts Palestinians on a path toward statehood. During meetings in Tel Aviv, Mr. Blinken said Israel had “real opportunities” to strengthen ties with Arab nations, as he sought to find a political endgame to the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza and calm regional violence arising from the conflict, even as Israel says it is slowing down major combat operations in Gaza.

  • Saipem completes Saudi pipelines project

    The scope of work encompassed the procurement and construction of a system of pipelines of various diameters, with an overall length of over 700 km, and included flowlines, trunklines, and transmission lines, as well as associated facilities for the transportation of gas from various points of storage and distribution inside the facilities, such as liquid station separations, remote headers, gas gathering manifolds, and off plot tie-in facilities. The project presented challenges from a logistics, safety, security, and project management point of view, Saipem commented in the post.

  • Saudi allocates $182m for mineral exploration incentives

    Saudi Arabia has created a mineral exploration incentive programme with a budget of over $182 million, the country’s minister of industry and mineral resources said today, Reuters reports. Mining is a key part of Saudi Arabia’s efforts to build an economy that does not rely mostly on oil, involving a shift towards tapping vast reserves of phosphate, gold, copper and bauxite. On Tuesday, Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Bandar Alkhorayef said the government has revised upwards estimates for its untapped mineral resources to $2.5 trillion, from a 2016 forecast of $1.3 trillion.

  • Saudi Arabia says focused on all kinds of energy, not just oil

    Saudi Arabia is taking climate change issues seriously and has shifted its focus to all kinds of energy, not just oil, Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz Bin Salman told an industry event on Wednesday. Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil exporter, supported a deal at the U.N. climate summit in December to transition the global economy to cleaner forms of energy. But the Saudi-led oil producer group the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) had opposed a group of some 100 countries that lobbied for stronger language to "phase out" oil, gas and coal use in the final agreement.

  • Saudi Arabia’s new civil laws aim to boost investment, but caution lingers

    For private equity investor Imad Ghandour changes in Saudi Arabia's laws are prompting a rethink and his firm may buy, for the first time, minority stakes in the kingdom's companies. It is exactly an effect the country's leaders are aiming for as they seek to woo billions of dollars in new capital to wean its economy off fossil fuels. On Dec. 16, the kingdom's first written civil code came into effect, replacing a system where judges would have full discretion in ruling on commercial disputes using Islamic law, sharia, as guidance. That created uncertainty for investors like Ghandour, who until now would only invest in majority stakes in Saudi companies.

  • Saudi Arabia Overtakes the UAE in Middle East VC Fund Raising

    Saudi Arabia secured more venture capital investments than its main regional competitor, the United Arab Emirates, for the first time last year as government-backed funds boosted spending in the sector. Startups in the kingdom raised $1.4 billion, a 33% increase from a year earlier and just over half of all venture capital funding raised in the Middle East and North Africa in 2023, according to Dubai-based venture capital data platform Magnitt.

  • Austin leaves intensive care amid growing scrutiny of Pentagon secrecy

    Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, whose failure to disclose his need for emergency hospitalization has ignited a firestorm, was moved out of intensive care on Monday, as Democrats and Republicans intensified their calls for accountability, and senior officials at the White House and Pentagon struggled to defuse the uproar.

  • Blinken brings Arab message to Israel: keep hope of Palestinian state alive

    U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, on his latest mission to rein in the Gaza war, told Israeli leaders on Tuesday there was still a chance of winning acceptance from their Arab neighbours, if they create a path to a viable Palestinian state.

    On his fourth trip to the region since October in a so far largely fruitless quest to tamp down the violence, Blinken said he would share what he had heard in two days of talks with Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.

  • The Biden administration is seeing its Middle East policies collapsing

    Repeated entreaties by the Biden administration on Israel's largely Jewish supremacist cabinet, particularly ministers in charge of the West Bank like Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, have gone unheeded, and both the Israeli military and the radical and violent settler allies of these extremist politicians have been conducting themselves with reckless and indefensible brutality against Palestinians in the West Bank, who have been relatively quiet despite the provocation of Israel's appalling war of vengeance in Gaza.

  • Expo 2030: An Opportunity to Define Riyadh’s Future

    On November 29, Riyadh was chosen to host the 2030 World Expo beating out Rome and the South Korean port city of Busan for an event expected to draw millions of visitors. Members of the Paris-based Bureau International des Expositions chose Riyadh with a majority of 119 out of 165 votes during a closed-door meeting. Focused on shaping a prosperous and sustainable future, under the theme “The Era of Change: Together for a Foresighted Tomorrow,” the expo will run from October 1, 2030 to March 31, 2031.