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Saudi Arabia announces $500 billion mega city project

So you are saying that 25 million locals (in reality approaching 30 million - the number will only continue to grow) can fit into a small part of the Tabuk Province the size of 26,500 sq km? In such a case KSA would be the most densely populated country or one of them and basically approaching South Asian levels! Thank God that KSA is the 12th largest country in the world and that we will always have plenty of wonderful wild nature and space.



Keep dreaming. Tiny Israel plays no role when it comes to NEOM although NEOM alone will be a bigger and much more beautiful than your pariah state.:lol:


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Cornelia Meyer | Published — Thursday 26 October 2017
New Saudi undertaking is of epic proportions

Earlier this week, the great and the good congregated in Riyadh at the Future Investment Initiative (FII) Summit to deliberate the role of sovereign wealth in driving the next wave of business, innovation, technology and investment. The event was hosted under the patronage of King Salman.
So plentiful and senior was the participation that the conference was dubbed “Davos in the Desert.” Like Davos, Bloomberg, CNBC and co were busy airing interviews with senior business leaders, who explained their corporate strategies.
It was another opportunity for Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to present Vision 2030 to the world’s most important economic players. The CEO of the Kingdom’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), Yasir bin Othman Al-Rumayyan, delineated his organization’s strategy going forward. But the biggest stir was created by the unveiling of NEOM, a futuristic megacity to be built on the shores of the Red Sea and financed with $500 billion.
This special economic zone will span three countries, and its territory will be bigger than half of Switzerland. The location is strategic, because 10 percent of international trade passes through the Red Sea and 70 percent of the world’s population is within eight hours’ flight.
The megacity will be solely powered by renewable energy and focus on sectors such as mobility, industry, biotechnology, media, technology and tourism. This is an undertaking of truly epic proportions. The beauty of NEOM is that it neatly fits into another grand geo-economic design: China’s “One Belt, One Road” vision.
The naysayers were quick to point out the difficulties in creating such a metropolis from scratch — as they had been in describing the obstacles to implementing Vision 2030. Are the vision and NEOM ambitious? Yes. Will there be many hurdles to overcome, and will there be setbacks? Yes. But 70 percent of the Kingdom’s population is below the age of 30 (roughly 23 million people). The country urgently needs to create jobs to accommodate this “youth bulge.”

With 70 percent of the Kingdom’s population below the age of 30, the country urgently needs to create jobs to accommodate its ‘youth bulge,’ and Vision 2030 and NEOM are set to provide just that.


Cornelia Meyer


The dominant oil and petrochemicals sectors are not labor-intensive enough to achieve this goal, so the government has no alternative but to come up with ambitious plans. In order to move an affluent and conservative society, one probably needs to set ambitious targets. Sometimes one has to “shock” the powers that be and the people a bit in order to move the needle.
Where the Kingdom and the FII got it right was that job creation on this scale needs a vision, and a bold one at that. Visions need momentum. There is nothing to focus the mind more than sharing these plans with world leaders and getting their buy-in. This creates excitement on a global strategic level, which in turn creates an obligation on behalf of the host government to deliver.
The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region needs to create in excess of 100 million jobs over the next 10 years just to stand still. Countries urgently need to provide employment for their young populations. The region outside the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) is sadly affected by many internal and external problems, as well as by political strife. This means the debate never moves on from politics to economics, but it needs to if the young are to find employment.
MENA needs major infrastructure projects to be designed and implemented to get economies moving. Public and private sectors need to coordinate investment to create the much-needed jobs. Maybe Vision 2030 and the conference can serve as an inspiration. NEOM can hopefully become a catalyst and an example for neighboring countries.
The economic debate is crucial, because it is not possible to create stable and peaceful societies with unemployed young men roaming the streets. The youth of the region needs and deserves a perspective.

• Cornelia Meyer is a business consultant, macroeconomist and energy expert.
Twitter: @MeyerResources


http://www.arabnews.com/node/1183701

Foreign investors to be given full access to Saudi parallel market
Reuters | Published — Friday 27 October 2017

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Mohammed El-Kuwaiz, chairman of the Capital Market Authority. (Courtesy of Tadawul)

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia plans to make its capital market more accessible to foreign investors by giving them full access to NOMU, a parallel market recently launched for small and medium-sized enterprises, Mohammed El-Kuwaiz, chairman of the Capital Market Authority (CMA) said Thursday.
Non-resident foreign investors will be able to invest directly in the parallel market starting from Jan. 1 next year, he said during an investment conference taking place this week in Riyadh.
Saudi Arabia’s reforms to develop and open up its capital markets are part of Vision 2030, an economic reform plan aimed at boosting growth in the private sector and at diversifying the country’s economy beyond oil.
Qualified foreign institutions were allowed to start investing directly in Saudi Arabia’s stock market in 2015, and qualification requirements were eased in 2016.
Saudi Arabia has now over 100 qualified foreign institutional investors, of which more than 20 percent registered in the past month, El-Kuwaiz said.
Foreign investors in NOMU will no longer have to meet requirements to qualify as foreign institutional investors, but will have to continue to obey limits on foreign ownership of stocks, the chairman said.
As part of its efforts to open up the Saudi capital market, the CMA is reviewing issuing and listing rules to make the listing of stocks and debt instruments easier, he said.
As to new listings, around five to six initial public offerings are currently being reviewed by the authority, El-Kuwaiz said.
When asked about the IPO of oil giant Saudi Aramco, El-Kuwaiz said that foreign investors could participate in IPOs within Saudi Arabia. Saudi authorities have said Saudi Aramco would be listed on both the Saudi stock exchange, called Tadawul, and on one or more international exchanges.
During the same investment conference in Riyadh this week, the CEO of Tadawul said the Saudi stock exchange could absorb the entirety of Saudi Aramco’s IPO.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1183866/saudi-arabia

Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul stock exchange chief pledges more reforms
Frank Kane | Published — Thursday 26 October 2017




RIYADH: Sarah Al-Suhaimi, the chairperson of the Tadawul stock exchange, has committed the Riyadh market to further reform and modernization in an effort to ensure inclusion in global investment indices as soon as possible.
Speaking at the Future Investment Initiative (FII) in the Saudi capital, she said that there was “more to come” from the Tadawul’s expansion program, in particular plans to introduce a clearing house for derivatives trading and a plan to cross-list stocks with other Gulf and international exchanges.
“We want to encourage everyone to invest in Saudi Arabia, and we are continuously changing to make this easier,” she told Howard Marks, chairman of US investor Oaktree Capital, at the FII.
“We have already introduced very necessary changes, and the results are showing with Tadawul on the watch list for inclusion in the MSCI and FTSE Russell indices,” she said.
One of the leading female business leaders in the country, she also outlined the changes already introduced at Tadawul to broaden its international appeal, including opening the exchange to foreign investors and introducing a more efficient system of share settlement.
The plan to cross-list with other Gulf exchanges could be an important move as the Kingdom seeks to develop its capital markets.
The Tadawul is the biggest exchange in the region and ranked 26 in the world in market capitalization, but has suffered from what some investors regard as a lack of liquidity and transparency in comparison with markets in other countries.
She also spoke of the need to get women more involved in the financial industry and used her own career as an example. “I began at Samba and faced small challenges that nobody wanted to do. But we used to dream big and we met those challenges.
“Today, endless opportunities exist in Saudi Arabia for women, who have more support. They can do much more for themselves in the country,” she added.
“What I want to tell young women is if you find a challenge in a field that you like, just do it, even if you think you can’t succeed. I know they can.”
The Tadawul chief also touched on Saudi Aramco, the oil company which is planning an international public offering next year on the Tadawul and possibly another big international exchange.
“Aramco is one of the biggest talent factories in the Kingdom, with established practices and cultures allowing young people to develop,” she said.
She added that Tadawul was to launch a series of roadshows in a bid to attract big institutional capital.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1183306/business-economy

SoftBank books $3 billion in first 5 months of partnership with Saudi PIF
FRANK KANE | Published — Thursday 26 October 2017
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Masayoshi Son. (AFP)

RIYADH: Masayoshi Son, the partner of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, revealed that his Vision Fund has made a return of 22 percent in its first five months of operation and turned in a profit of $3 billion.
Now he is ready to launch similar funds in the near future.
Son, also founder and chief executive of SoftBank of Japan, told the Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh that now was the time to invest in the hi-technology sector because the future prospects of artificial intelligence and robotics were so positive.
“This is just the start for tech valuations. I would not call it a peak at all, it is just the beginning,” he said, contrary to some expert predictions of a “bubble” in technology valuations.
PIF pledged to commit $45 billion to the Vision Fund.
Son said that the fund had made some 15 investments in its first five months.
“People said that $100 billion is too much to put into a single fund, but I say it’s too little. I would like to do more of a similar size.
“The next one will not take five years. Each fund will be roughly the same size, but we will launch them more frequently,” he said.
“People call me an optimist, people say I’m crazy, but I take it as a compliment,” he said.
Son, who almost went bankrupt in the dot com bust of 2000, said that then was the perfect time to invest in hi-technology. “If I had any money, I would have bought then,” he said.
He was speaking after Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman unveiled plans for a $500 billion megacity called Neom in the north west of the country bordering Jordan and Egypt.
“I’m very excited to be part of Neom, and by the role we will be playing in it with the Kingdom,” he added.
He also told how the Crown Prince had first talked to him about technology investment in Tokyo.
“People says that I convinced him to put $45 billion into the fund during a 45 minute conversation, but that is not how it happened. He already had the idea to go for artificial intelligence, robots and super technology, and we found we had a lot in common. That’s how we created a friendship, partnership and a bonding of the mind,” he said.
“It is a great dream. All the dreamers come to a new place, and we will create that at Neom,” Son said.
He mapped out a future for the business world where artificial intelligence and robotics would become the driving commercial forces.
“Ten years ago, the only technology company in the top ten biggest in the world by market capitalization was Microsoft. Today, there are seven tech companies in that list, and two of them are Chinese,” he said.
“Artificial intelligence will redefine every industry. The Internet is only a small part of the big change. AI will revolutionize all sectors,” he added.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1183266/saudi-arabia

Saudi Arabia’s PIF aims to manage over $400 billion in assets by 2020
Reuters | Published — Wednesday 25 October 2017

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Saudi Arabia's PIF aims to manage over $400 bln in assets by 2020." (SPA)

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) aims to increase its assets under management to 1.5 trillion riyals ($400 billion) by 2020 as part of the country’s Vision 2030, an economic reform plan aimed at boosting private-sector growth and developing non-oil industries.
The country’s main sovereign wealth fund, which is expected to receive proceeds from the planned sale of 5 percent of state oil company Saudi Aramco’s shares, has currently around $230 billion worth of assets under management.
PIF plans to create 20,000 direct domestic jobs, and 256,000 construction jobs by 2020. This will increase PIF’s contribution to Saudi Arabia’s gross domestic product from 4.4 percent to 6.3 percent, it said in a statement on Wednesday, during a huge investment conference in Riyadh arranged by the fund.
Investments will be in sectors such as real estate and infrastructure as well as in new areas of activity in the Saudi economy through the establishment of companies such as the Saudi Arabian Military Industries company and the Saudi Real Estate Refinancing Company.
One of the biggest tasks under PIF’s responsibility is the delivery of a $500 billion plan to build a business and industrial zone extending into Jordan and Egypt.
PIF will also seek to maximize value in the fund’s existing assets and has set a new target to increase total shareholder return to 4-5 percent from 3 percent, it said on Wednesday.
“The PIF Program represents a vital milestone as we work toward realizing Vision 2030,” Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al-Saud, the plan’s architect, said in a statement.
Outside of Saudi Arabia, PIF’s investments will be in a number of assets such as fixed-income, public equity, private equity and debt, real estate, infrastructure and alternative investments such as hedge funds, the fund said.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1182936/saudi-arabia
KSA and Egypt can't do it without Israel's approval as it's part of the peace agreement btw Egypt and Israel
 
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KSA and Egypt can't do it without Israel's approval as it's part of the peace agreement btw Egypt and Israel

You are talking about the upcoming and historical (as well) King Salman bridge that will connect Asia with Africa for the first time in history. That has little to do with NEOM. Did you bother to read this thread before you began to troll?

Well if such a thing exists Israel will of course not object and even if they did what could they do to KSA and Egypt? Almost nothing but some shouting.

Tiny Israel are desperate to have cordial relations with KSA and Egypt. The two powers (current ones) of the Arab world that tiny Israel is surrounded by on all sides. Therefore Israel will not put any obstacles just like with the handover of Sanafir and Tiran to KSA.

Instead of posting on PDF you better go talk some sense to your extremist who continue to steal Palestinian land and make trouble up. They do not even spare the beautiful olive tree.
 
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KSA and Egypt can't do it without Israel's approval as it's part of the peace agreement btw Egypt and Israel

Hopefully Israel doesn't get all petty and not approve it (if this is the case, hopefully it's not).
 
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You are talking about the upcoming and historical (as well) King Salman bridge that will connect Asia with Africa for the first time in history. That has little to do with NEOM. Did you bother to read this thread before you began to troll?

Well if such a thing exists Israel will of course not object and even if they did what could they do to KSA and Egypt? Almost nothing but some shouting.

Tiny Israel are desperate to have cordial relations with KSA and Egypt. The two powers (current ones) of the Arab world that tiny Israel is surrounded by on all sides. Therefore Israel will not put any obstacles just like with the handover of Sanafir and Tiran to KSA.

Instead of posting on PDF you better go talk some sense to your extremist Zionists (the East European lot who used to live in ghettos and had a pogrom once in a while) who continue to steal Palestinian land and make trouble up. They do not even spare the beautiful olive tree.

BTW are you not that Iraqi Jew? In other words an Arab Jew?
How my post is a troll exactly? and I how my ethnicity has anything to do with the thread? I posted related news and u started to shout Israel Israel at me
 
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How my post is a troll exactly? and I how my ethnicity has anything to do with the thread? I posted related news and u started to shout Israel Israel at me

NEOM is related to the proposed and upcoming King Salman bridge?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudi–Egypt_Causeway

You are trolling because you know that Israel is incapable of doing anything to KSA and Egypt (even if Israel did object to that historic bridge connection Asia with Africa) while you are also well aware of the fact that Israel did not object to Sanafir and Tiran being given back to KSA.

Also you should know that Al-Araby Al-Jadeed is a Qatari owned newspaper in the diaspora (London). So obviously by mentioning Israel they are desperately trying to give a bad picture of KSA by saying that NEOM needs Israeli approval. Just ridiculous.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Araby_Al-Jadeed

I am sure that you know all this already.

As for Israel, if Israel could treat the Palestinians rightfully and return to the 1967 borders there would be little problem as Arabs and Jews, despite some rivalry here and there, overall have had cordial and close ties throughout much of the past 3000 years. Your King Herod the Great (greatest Jewish builder in history) was half Arab (his mother was an Nabatean Princess from Hijaz) for instance and that was over 2000 years ago.

So your behavior is a bit frustrating considering what we could accomplish jointly in a possible future. Your behavior is also frustrating because Arab rulers use this conflict to forget or not focus on what is necessary to focus on. Thus it is a problem for other Arabs other than Palestinians as well although KSA for instance has woken up.
 
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NEOM is related to the proposed and upcoming King Salman bridge?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudi–Egypt_Causeway

You are trolling because you know that Israel is incapable of doing anything to KSA and Egypt (even if Israel did object to that historic bridge connection Asia with Africa) while you are also well aware of the fact that Israel did not object to Sanafir and Tiran being given back to KSA.

Also you should know that Al-Araby Al-Jadeed is a Qatari owned newspaper in the diaspora (London). So obviously by mentioning Israel they are desperately trying to give a bad picture of KSA by saying that NEOM needs Israeli approval. Just ridiculous.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Araby_Al-Jadeed

I am sure that you know all this already.

As for Israel, if Israel could treat the Palestinians rightfully and return to the 1967 borders there would be little problem as Arabs and Jews, despite some rivalry here and there, overall have had cordial and close ties throughout much of the past 3000 years. Your King Herod the Great (greatest Jewish builder in history) was half Arab (his mother was an Nabatean Princess from Hijaz).

So your behavior is a bit frustrating considering what we could accomplish jointly in a possible future.
No sense, Israel has legal right to do it as part of of the peace deal that was signed with Egypt, u might no like it but that's the truth.
Israel did not object because it serve it interests, nothing else.
ISRAELI COMPANIES TALKING TO SAUDI ARABIA ABOUT $500B. ‘SMART CITY’
Ties remain under the table, as long as impasse with Palestinians continues.
3 minute read.

When Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman announced on Tuesday a $500 billion “Smart City” project to be located a few kilometers from Eilat, he mentioned establishing a joint economic zone with Jordan and Egypt, omitting one country wedged in between.

A number of Israeli companies are talking to the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia about developing the proposed 26,500-sq.km. “Smart City” zone, The Jerusalem Post has learned, a blow to the decades-long Arab League boycott of the Jewish state. The sovereign wealth fund is owned and controlled by the Saudi state.

Nicknamed NEOM – from neo (new in Latin) and the first letter of “mostqabal,” an Arabic word meaning “future” – the “Smart City” would host hi-tech companies working in a range of fields, including solar energy, water, biotechnology, robotics and food technology, all of which are fields where Israeli start-ups and firms are more established than competitors in Arab countries.

Due to the diplomatic sensitivity of the project, no Israeli company could go public with details of the contact with the Saudi fund, which has some $230b. in assets under management, according to Reuters.

“The Saudis are not so willing to cooperate with the Israelis formally, but when a VC [venture capital firm] is coming from the private sector, it’s much easier to create all kinds of cooperation on water, energy, ag-tech, foodtech. This is the stuff that the prince of Saudi Arabia wants to promote in the smart city,” said a source in Israeli venture capital who is familiar with the project.

The Post has seen correspondence between Arab diplomats and Israeli businessmen confirming that talks are ongoing over economic cooperation, and a number of Israeli companies are already selling cybersecurity tools to the Saudi government.

Many of the Israeli companies would be able to publicly operate – and the Israeli government could openly cooperate with Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt – if a diplomatic breakthrough with the Palestinians were to emerge, said an Israeli businessman who is intimately familiar with the Smart City project.

In the meantime, the Israeli firms will be forced to operate under the table as they compete for billion-dollar contracts.

The zone is adjacent to the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba, and close to the Suez Canal, a major shipping terminal. Picked to run the NEOM project is Klaus Kleinfeld, the former CEO of American aluminum manufacturer Alcoa Inc. and previously CEO of German engineering company Siemens AG.

To build a multibillion-dollar smart city that’s run on renewable energy and manned by robots, the Saudi government would need technological expertise, and it might be impossible to rely entirely on domestic companies.

That’s where Israeli companies could step in.

Addressing the annual JOURNEY business conference in Tel Aviv on Wednesday, ex-Labor MK and founder of JVP venture capital fund Erel Margalit spoke about economic opportunities for Israel in the Smart City project.

“What politicians don’t understand: things don’t happen unless there are business opportunities,” said Margalit, who earlier this year visited a number of Arab Gulf countries to discuss economic cooperation with the Jewish state. He stepped down from the Knesset some two weeks ago, after losing the primary to lead the opposition Labor Party.

“There’s a lot of discussion with Arab businessmen and political figures; most of these discussions are very quiet and private,” Margalit told the Post. “The fact that [Prince bin] Salman came up with this announcement to call for cooperation on a regional level... it’s giving Israelis an opportunity to speak in the name of regional economic cooperation through the concept of innovation.

This is going to be the biggest drive of change in the region.”

Margalit also spoke about proposed joint-infrastructure projects between Israel, Jordan, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, specifically building an airport with four terminals, allowing passengers to disembark and travel to any of the four countries. That would be on hold until Israel reaches a peace agreement with the Palestinians, he added. The Jordanian-Israeli peace treaty in 1994 included plans for a joint airport near Aqaba and Eilat, but that never materialized.

“Governments need to be informed; they don’t always lead. You need to build a business plan that’s very concrete and that has the interest of many investors and companies, which will compel the politicians to open their eyes and ears,” Margalit said.

http://www.jpost.com/Business-and-I...-Saudi-Arabia-about-500-bil-smart-city-508429
 
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No sense, Israel has legal right to do it as part of of the peace deal that was signed with Egypt, u might no like it but that's the truth.
Israel did not object because it serve it interests, nothing else.
ISRAELI COMPANIES TALKING TO SAUDI ARABIA ABOUT $500B. ‘SMART CITY’
Ties remain under the table, as long as impasse with Palestinians continues.
3 minute read.

When Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman announced on Tuesday a $500 billion “Smart City” project to be located a few kilometers from Eilat, he mentioned establishing a joint economic zone with Jordan and Egypt, omitting one country wedged in between.

A number of Israeli companies are talking to the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia about developing the proposed 26,500-sq.km. “Smart City” zone, The Jerusalem Post has learned, a blow to the decades-long Arab League boycott of the Jewish state. The sovereign wealth fund is owned and controlled by the Saudi state.

Nicknamed NEOM – from neo (new in Latin) and the first letter of “mostqabal,” an Arabic word meaning “future” – the “Smart City” would host hi-tech companies working in a range of fields, including solar energy, water, biotechnology, robotics and food technology, all of which are fields where Israeli start-ups and firms are more established than competitors in Arab countries.

Due to the diplomatic sensitivity of the project, no Israeli company could go public with details of the contact with the Saudi fund, which has some $230b. in assets under management, according to Reuters.

“The Saudis are not so willing to cooperate with the Israelis formally, but when a VC [venture capital firm] is coming from the private sector, it’s much easier to create all kinds of cooperation on water, energy, ag-tech, foodtech. This is the stuff that the prince of Saudi Arabia wants to promote in the smart city,” said a source in Israeli venture capital who is familiar with the project.

The Post has seen correspondence between Arab diplomats and Israeli businessmen confirming that talks are ongoing over economic cooperation, and a number of Israeli companies are already selling cybersecurity tools to the Saudi government.

Many of the Israeli companies would be able to publicly operate – and the Israeli government could openly cooperate with Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt – if a diplomatic breakthrough with the Palestinians were to emerge, said an Israeli businessman who is intimately familiar with the Smart City project.

In the meantime, the Israeli firms will be forced to operate under the table as they compete for billion-dollar contracts.

The zone is adjacent to the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba, and close to the Suez Canal, a major shipping terminal. Picked to run the NEOM project is Klaus Kleinfeld, the former CEO of American aluminum manufacturer Alcoa Inc. and previously CEO of German engineering company Siemens AG.

To build a multibillion-dollar smart city that’s run on renewable energy and manned by robots, the Saudi government would need technological expertise, and it might be impossible to rely entirely on domestic companies.

That’s where Israeli companies could step in.

Addressing the annual JOURNEY business conference in Tel Aviv on Wednesday, ex-Labor MK and founder of JVP venture capital fund Erel Margalit spoke about economic opportunities for Israel in the Smart City project.

“What politicians don’t understand: things don’t happen unless there are business opportunities,” said Margalit, who earlier this year visited a number of Arab Gulf countries to discuss economic cooperation with the Jewish state. He stepped down from the Knesset some two weeks ago, after losing the primary to lead the opposition Labor Party.

“There’s a lot of discussion with Arab businessmen and political figures; most of these discussions are very quiet and private,” Margalit told the Post. “The fact that [Prince bin] Salman came up with this announcement to call for cooperation on a regional level... it’s giving Israelis an opportunity to speak in the name of regional economic cooperation through the concept of innovation.

This is going to be the biggest drive of change in the region.”

Margalit also spoke about proposed joint-infrastructure projects between Israel, Jordan, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, specifically building an airport with four terminals, allowing passengers to disembark and travel to any of the four countries. That would be on hold until Israel reaches a peace agreement with the Palestinians, he added. The Jordanian-Israeli peace treaty in 1994 included plans for a joint airport near Aqaba and Eilat, but that never materialized.

“Governments need to be informed; they don’t always lead. You need to build a business plan that’s very concrete and that has the interest of many investors and companies, which will compel the politicians to open their eyes and ears,” Margalit said.

http://www.jpost.com/Business-and-I...-Saudi-Arabia-about-500-bil-smart-city-508429

What has this to do with NEOM? There is a thread about the King Salman (KSA-Egypt Causeway) that another user created on PDF here on this section. You should post such articles there.

I don't care as I know that Israel will not object and even if that were to happen nothing would happen to KSA.

Well, if that will make NEOM greater then I will not object. This is not provoking me. While I am highly critical of Israel's endeavor when it comes to Palestine and Palestinians, I am not a proponent of ignoring entities or peoples just because of disagreements that might be solved eventually. Dialogue here is important.

Anyway I probably found your contribution strange considering how much of a historic and game-changing project this really is and how many internationally recognized firms and countries are involved. Or NEOM being located close to Israel.

Anyway the article that you just posted is more like it. That is a useful article.
 
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More photos of the region of KSA (historical Northern Hijaz) where NEOM is going to be located:



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Castle Moazm- قلعة المعظم by © Saud AL-Jethli, Photo, on Flickr

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هـدوء by © Saud AL-Jethli, Photo, on Flickr

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Untitled by © Saud AL-Jethli, Photo, on Flickr

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TABUK 9|9|6 by © Saud AL-Jethli, Photo, on Flickr

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الديسة by Desert نديم القهوة, on Flickr

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وادي علقان - حقل Valley Aleghan- haqel by mosa3ad alshetwi, on Flickr

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الميـــــــــنـــــــــــــــــــــاء by Naif Al-Sawkan, on Flickr

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Introducing Neom, the 500 billion-dollar, ultra-high tech future megacity of Saudi Arabia

Loz Blain

October 25th, 2017
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The building site for Neom: a futuristic city where the desert meets the Red Sea, with views of Egypt across the water, and plans for a giant bridge to cross the span(Credit: Discover Neom)​

Saudi Arabia is looking toward a post-oil future by sinking some US$500 billion into a massive, ultra-futuristic megacity project it calls Neom (or Neo-Mostaqbal; new future). Saudi Crown Prince Mohhamed bin Salman announced the giant project on Tuesday, a brand new city on the intersection of three countries, where "there is no room for old thinking."

This bold new vision comes with a startling and unequivocal message from Saudi Arabia's next king to its ultra-conservative Wahhabi clerics: "We are returning to what we were before, a country of moderate Islam that is open to all religions and to the world. We will not waste 30 years of our lives, wasting time dealing with extremist ideas. We will destroy them today."

neom-saudi-arabia-city-futuristic-1.png

The area earmarked for Neom, on the East coast of the Gulf of Aqaba, part of the Red Sea(Credit: Discover Neom)

Neom represents a radical shift in thinking. This giant city will be built to straddle the borders of Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt, with a total area around 26,500 square kilometres on the East side of the Gulf of Aqaba. The current project map, mind you, shows an area entirely within the Saudi Arabian border. For it to straddle borders, it'll need to include both sides of the gulf – and it's worth noting that Israel owns a tiny slice of that waterfront too, home to the resort town and sea port of Eilat.


neom-saudi-arabia-city-futuristic-10.jpg

Location of Neom: current project area is entirely within Saudi Arabia, so presumably in order to span Jordan and Egypt as well, both sides of the gulf will come into play. That leaves a slice of Israeli coastline in the picture as well.(Credit: Google Maps)

The Neom area is currently mostly entirely barren mountain terrain and desert, although some 10 degrees cooler than the average Gulf state city, with 460 kilometres of Red Sea coastline (if both sides of the gulf are counted), numerous islands, and a 2500-metre tall mountain range for scenic charm. An airport built here would be less than 8 hours flight for some 70 percent of the world's population.

Neom will operate as its own independent "special zone." It will remain under the Saudi Kingdon's sovereignty, but will have an entirely new set of laws, both judicial and regulatory, developed with the primary purpose of attracting as much global investment, talent and business as possible. Investors will be invited to participate in the drafting of regulations and legislation, and the social side of things can be expected to be much more liberal and globally focused than Saudi Arabia has been known for in recent years. The promotional material shows shadowy images of women with free-flowing hair and nary a hijab to be seen.

Dr. Klaus Kleinfeld, the former Chairman and CEO of Alcoa, Arconic Inc., and Siemens AG has been nominated as CEO of the Neom project.

The whole area is mostly a giant blank slate, upon which the Crown Prince wishes to write the future of modern humanity. As such, Neom will be built on cutting-edge technological foundations.

Energy and water
Clean energy is the top of the priority list here; vast solar and wind harvesting power plants are planned. Large-scale energy storage solutions are also on the menu, as well as some kind of desalination program to recover fresh water from the Red Sea.

Transport
Neom may be the first city ever designed with three-dimensional electric commuting in mind. With phase one of the city expected to be complete by 2025, this isn't far out of line with many expectations of when autonomous flying taxis should be ready for commercialization. Road users won't be left behind, either, with a massive King Salman Bridge project planned to connect Asia with Africa.

Food production

Neom is ready to fully adopt the concept of vertical farming to help feed its population in a water, time and space-efficient way, as well as arid and seawater farming and solar-powered greenhouses. Creating a fertile oasis in this dry desert area will be no small challenge.
neom-saudi-arabia-city-futuristic-6.jpg

Neom: desert mountain ranges by the seaside make for spectacular coastal scenery(Credit: Discover Neom)
Key industries
The new city will work hard and design its regulatory framework to attract high-tech businesses, particularly in fields like biotech, advanced and additive manufacturing, robotics, renewable energy and futuristic transport solutions. Flying cars seem to be a key priority, with the Discover Neom website offering developers "a chance to test out inventions like … passenger drones and self-learning traffic systems in a live destination setting."

There's plenty more to dig through: Free, "highest speed" internet for everyone; automated, interactive government services for residents; wave pools; a focus on media, digital content and video game production; huge sports and recreation facilities, with a focus on global events. It's a city that will be built around best practice healthy living guidelines. By 2030, the project team expects Neom to be contributing as much as US$100 million per year back to the Saudi economy, and leading the world in per-capita GDP.

It's a glorious goal, and rarely do we get a chance to see a clean-sheet vision of a future city at this stage; pure idealism, pure futurism, the loftiest of progressive, sustainable goals and the might of an almost inexhaustible chequebook behind it.

But if this is to be Dubai 2.0, there are many lessons to be learned, particularly in how an ultra-futuristic city like this can be built while maintaining dignity, living standards and human rights for the mammoth labour force upon whose backs and by whose hands the city will be built. One hopes an omelette like this can be made with a minimum of broken eggs, that this Elysium can be built without the creation of an impoverished underclass.

neom-saudi-arabia-city-futuristic-3.jpg

Neom: desert mountain ranges rise up to 2500 metres above sea level(Credit: Discover Neom)

neom-saudi-arabia-city-futuristic-5.jpg

Neom: pretty coastline with plenty of small islands(Credit: Discover Neom)

neom-saudi-arabia-city-futuristic-9.jpg

Neom: spectacular scenery and a cool climate for a gulf state city(Credit: Discover Neom)
Source: Discover Neom

https://newatlas.com/neom-saudi-arabia-future-megacity/51893/#gallery

So much potential.

Insha'Allah MbS is going to succeed and make Arabia great again!



There is already a Wikipedia page and 100's of articles have been written about this unbelievable megacity and project.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NEOM

The name NEOM was constructed from two words. The first three letters form the Latin prefix neo- meaning “new”. The fourth letter is from the abbreviation of “Mostaqbal” (Arabic: مستقبل‎‎), an Arabic word meaning “future.”[7]

There is such a positive vibe about KSA right now. Fantastic changes and extremely exciting times ahead of us for sure!

To the ignorant trolls on PDF:


Keep crying! Much more to come! Just the beginning!

Haha, just noticed that NEOM will be next to brotherly Jordan and more precisely unique Petra (World UNESCO Heritage Site and voted by millions of people as the seven wonder of the world) and Wadi Rum!

It's getting better and better!


:lol:



Haha, what are you talking about phantast?

All major projects are on the right track. The Riyadh metro is finishing soon (one of the largest and most spectacular metros in the world), the Makkah-Madinah high-speed railway is a few months away from being finished, the King Abdulaziz Airport (will be one of the biggest in the world) is over 90% complete etc. Will open by Ramadan.

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/the-...million-is-88-percent-completed.493633/page-2

Expats are rightly going to be taxed. As will locals eventually. No free riding anymore, thank God.

Sure, this historic announcement is just "hot air".:lol:

Go away you butthurt troll and mind your own business. Loving the envy at full display. Please continue. Your likes have been screaming that KSA will go bankrupt (one of the richest nations on the planet, one of the most debt-free, with a top 3 sovereign wealth fund, with one of the most potential out there, a country that is constantly in the top 15 of largest economies by 2040, 2050 etc. on every list, a country that IMF has praised in terms of economic reforms recently etc). Keep dreaming and I believe that you have greater things to worry about in your own little (in comparison most likely) native land whatever that is.:lol:

PDF the butthurt madhouse in action again. Never lets one down and just as I predicted. Keep crying while we will continue to improve and succeed on all fronts. KSA will only get stronger. So a lot of crying in sight. Time to leave again.
Awesome pics..and projects..

What has this to do with NEOM? There is a thread about the King Salman (KSA-Egypt Causeway) that another user created on PDF here on this section. You should post such articles there.

I don't care as I know that Israel will not object and even if that were to happen nothing would happen to KSA.

Well, if that will make NEOM greater then I will not object. This is not provoking me. While I am highly critical of Israel's endeavor when it comes to Palestine and Palestinians, I am not a proponent of ignoring entities or peoples just because of disagreements that might be solved eventually. Dialogue here is important.

Anyway I probably found your contribution strange considering how much of a historic and game-changing project this really is and how many internationally recognized firms and countries are involved. Or NEOM being located close to Israel.

Anyway the article that you just posted is more like it. That is a useful article.
The peace deal between Usrael and Egypt has a clause about Usrael's access to the Red sea.. this was taken into account in the design, since the bridge will be high enough to allow all ship sizes to pass..I don't know what they are crying about!

No sense, Israel has legal right to do it as part of of the peace deal that was signed with Egypt, u might no like it but that's the truth.
Israel did not object because it serve it interests, nothing else.
ISRAELI COMPANIES TALKING TO SAUDI ARABIA ABOUT $500B. ‘SMART CITY’
Ties remain under the table, as long as impasse with Palestinians continues.
3 minute read.

When Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman announced on Tuesday a $500 billion “Smart City” project to be located a few kilometers from Eilat, he mentioned establishing a joint economic zone with Jordan and Egypt, omitting one country wedged in between.

A number of Israeli companies are talking to the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia about developing the proposed 26,500-sq.km. “Smart City” zone, The Jerusalem Post has learned, a blow to the decades-long Arab League boycott of the Jewish state. The sovereign wealth fund is owned and controlled by the Saudi state.

Nicknamed NEOM – from neo (new in Latin) and the first letter of “mostqabal,” an Arabic word meaning “future” – the “Smart City” would host hi-tech companies working in a range of fields, including solar energy, water, biotechnology, robotics and food technology, all of which are fields where Israeli start-ups and firms are more established than competitors in Arab countries.

Due to the diplomatic sensitivity of the project, no Israeli company could go public with details of the contact with the Saudi fund, which has some $230b. in assets under management, according to Reuters.

“The Saudis are not so willing to cooperate with the Israelis formally, but when a VC [venture capital firm] is coming from the private sector, it’s much easier to create all kinds of cooperation on water, energy, ag-tech, foodtech. This is the stuff that the prince of Saudi Arabia wants to promote in the smart city,” said a source in Israeli venture capital who is familiar with the project.

The Post has seen correspondence between Arab diplomats and Israeli businessmen confirming that talks are ongoing over economic cooperation, and a number of Israeli companies are already selling cybersecurity tools to the Saudi government.

Many of the Israeli companies would be able to publicly operate – and the Israeli government could openly cooperate with Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt – if a diplomatic breakthrough with the Palestinians were to emerge, said an Israeli businessman who is intimately familiar with the Smart City project.

In the meantime, the Israeli firms will be forced to operate under the table as they compete for billion-dollar contracts.

The zone is adjacent to the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba, and close to the Suez Canal, a major shipping terminal. Picked to run the NEOM project is Klaus Kleinfeld, the former CEO of American aluminum manufacturer Alcoa Inc. and previously CEO of German engineering company Siemens AG.

To build a multibillion-dollar smart city that’s run on renewable energy and manned by robots, the Saudi government would need technological expertise, and it might be impossible to rely entirely on domestic companies.

That’s where Israeli companies could step in.

Addressing the annual JOURNEY business conference in Tel Aviv on Wednesday, ex-Labor MK and founder of JVP venture capital fund Erel Margalit spoke about economic opportunities for Israel in the Smart City project.

“What politicians don’t understand: things don’t happen unless there are business opportunities,” said Margalit, who earlier this year visited a number of Arab Gulf countries to discuss economic cooperation with the Jewish state. He stepped down from the Knesset some two weeks ago, after losing the primary to lead the opposition Labor Party.

“There’s a lot of discussion with Arab businessmen and political figures; most of these discussions are very quiet and private,” Margalit told the Post. “The fact that [Prince bin] Salman came up with this announcement to call for cooperation on a regional level... it’s giving Israelis an opportunity to speak in the name of regional economic cooperation through the concept of innovation.

This is going to be the biggest drive of change in the region.”

Margalit also spoke about proposed joint-infrastructure projects between Israel, Jordan, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, specifically building an airport with four terminals, allowing passengers to disembark and travel to any of the four countries. That would be on hold until Israel reaches a peace agreement with the Palestinians, he added. The Jordanian-Israeli peace treaty in 1994 included plans for a joint airport near Aqaba and Eilat, but that never materialized.

“Governments need to be informed; they don’t always lead. You need to build a business plan that’s very concrete and that has the interest of many investors and companies, which will compel the politicians to open their eyes and ears,” Margalit said.

http://www.jpost.com/Business-and-I...-Saudi-Arabia-about-500-bil-smart-city-508429
Usrael can keep dreaming.. no declared or under the table deals will happen with Usrael's government or private companies..these articles are full of wishful thinking.. it is a question of principles.. Usrael gives the right to the Palestinians to have their own state..or no deals at all..the ball is in Usrael's court..

Nice vision, plan, PR, event, and I'm sure delicious kabsa was served to the guests.
However in real world 500 billion is no joke.
So the question is how many billions will be invested by Saudi state and how many by saudi and foreign private sector?
Who are those who are ready to invest their money?
Why would they not go for alternative projects?
What is the experience with previous planned projects in Saudi Arabia?
How big was the foreign investment in Saudi Arabia in the past 8 years?
Only chance for only starting this project (I'm not talking about its results) is that the largest part of the investments will be done by Saudi government.
Some of the potential first investors in the project:

Russian Direct Investment Fund
Sovereign Wealth Fund of the Government of Singapore
Malaysian sovereign wealth fund
The sovereign wealth fund of the State of Azerbaijan
North Star Colony
Apollo Global Management
First Eastern Investment Group
Black Rock Company.
Mumtalakat Holding Company
Mubadala Investment Company

These were all present at the 3 day conference and showed their interests, these alone represent $22 trillion assets.. there are many more that have shown real interest..

There is more information in this thread:

At the Edge of technology: Klaus Kleinfeld appointed as CEO of Neom

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/at-t...feld-appointed-as-ceo-of-neom-project.525336/


I was in Saudi early this year... most projects were at a stand still because the government had run out of funds. New Jeddah airport construction which is 80% complete was at a standstill because the government was unable to pay the remaining 20%. Foreigners are being charged tax to make up for the budget deficit because of the oil price crash and the Yemen war.

Not all things are well in the kingdom.

They are hoping to raise funds by giving out shares in Aramco... nobody is biting.

Let's see... good luck to the house of Saud
Some projects slowed down because they are privately financed.. all government projects are progressing according to schedule..

http://www.smh.com.au/business/worl...gacity-says-crown-prince-20171024-gz7koh.html
Hertog said investors will want to see whether "circumventing some of the slow mainline bureaucracy and general social restrictions in Saudi Arabia in a special zone" can work.
"If this is to be an international hub, it needs to offer something better than Dubai, which is a high bar to cross,"

It will be interesting how this new city will be able to compete with Dubai
NEOM will have its own economic policies drafted by its own Investors "government".. but the sovereignty laws will still be Saudi.. this goes beyond Dubai policies.. Neom will be to KSA what Hong Kong is to China.. like a state within a state..it is also going to be the Saudi commercial and industrial capital..
 
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Numerous wealthy and successful private investors are very interested in investing in NEOM and KSA in general.

DNDLkT4XkAAgZqM.jpg



DNALJ4OWAAA3HyI.jpg


https://english.alarabiya.net/en/bu...s-dialogue-for-investment-opportunities-.html


Saudis Are Talking to Amazon, Alibaba About New City, Prince Says

By Alaa Shahine, Erik Schatzker, Vivian Nereim and Glen Carey
26 October 2017

‘First robot in Neom will be Neom itself,’ crown prince says
Crown prince comments on the project in a Bloomberg interview

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said Saudi Arabia is in talks with some of the world’s biggest companies to develop technologies that will power life in the $500 billion city he’s planning to build on the Red Sea.


Neom, as the project is known, is due to open for business by 2025, with limited operations expected as early as 2020, Prince Mohammed told Bloomberg News in an interview in Riyadh on Wednesday. Amazon.com Inc., Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Airbus SE are already involved in discussions, he said.


“We are talking with everyone,” said the 32-year-old prince, heir to the throne of the world’s biggest oil exporter. “We have the ‘who’s who’ from around the world engaging in this.”


Prince Mohammed is trying to steer Saudi Arabia away from oil-dependence, something that few major economies have managed. And he keeps moving the goalposts -- to make the plans more ambitious.

The social and economic changes outlined since 2015 already include selling a stake in oil giant Aramco, and ending a longstanding ban on women driving cars. This week, Prince Mohammed announced the city project, and also said he’ll transform the religious basis of Saudi society and make its austere version of Islam more “moderate.”

The two goals overlapped in a promotional video for Neom released this week, which featured scenes inconceivable in existing Saudi cities. The virtual women of Neom go jogging in leotards in public spaces, work alongside men, and play in a musical ensemble.



Artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things will combine to offer a lifestyle not available anywhere else, Prince Mohammed said in the interview. “Your medical file will be connected with your home supply, with your car, linked to your family, linked to your other files,” he said. “And the system develops itself in how to provide you with better things.”

Prince Mohammed envisions an app-driven city that is almost entirely automated and responsive to the needs to its residents. “The first robot in Neom will be Neom itself,” he said.

800x-1.png

It’s not the first time that Saudi Arabia has proposed to build new cities in the desert. The unveiling of Neom this week, at a Riyadh conference crammed with international financiers and policy makers, left some analysts pointing out that previous attempts didn’t come to much.

“Is Saudi Arabia about to repeat past mistakes?” Capital Economics, a London-based consultancy, wrote in a note. The kingdom “has a patchy record when it comes to fulfilling megaprojects,” it said.

Prince Mohammed acknowledged that some of those plans are doing better than critics have suggested. And he said his government is working to revive those that stalled -- citing the King Abdullah Financial District in Riyadh. While few lenders have committed to the area, the first phase is due to be opened in 2018 and the district will host leaders from the G-20 group of major economies two years after that, he said.

With Neom, the government is putting its credibility and money on the line. The country’s sovereign wealth fund and other investors are putting in “hundreds of billions,” Prince Mohammed said. Tuesday’s announcement said the project is backed by more than $500 billion of investments from the Saudi government, the Public Investment Fund, and local and international investors.
400x-1.jpg

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP/Getty Images

Agreements signed between Saudi Arabia and Egypt last year, including one to develop an industrial zone around the Sinai peninsula, were concluded with the new city in mind, he said.

“The purpose of signing this free zone north of Sinai is to link it with Neom,” the prince said. “Neom will have a lot of ports. Some of them in Saudi Arabia and some of them in Egypt.”

The Red Sea islands of Tiran and Sanafir also fall within the area. The islands were under Egyptian control until President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi agreed to hand them back to Saudi Arabia, sparking protests and legal challenges that Egypt’s parliament ultimately ignored.

Plans for the project include a bridge spanning the Red Sea, connecting the proposed new city to Egypt and the rest of Africa. Some 10,000 square miles (25,900 square kilometers) have been allocated for development of the urban area, which will stretch into Jordan as well as Egypt.

Asked if the city would compete with other regional commercial hubs such as Dubai, Prince Mohammed said the outcome will be more win-win than zero-sum. He said Neom will “create new demand” that will help its neighbors too. “I don’t think Hong Kong harmed Singapore, or Singapore harmed Hong Kong.”

— With assistance by Riad Hamade

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...g-to-amazon-alibaba-over-new-city-prince-says
 
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No, you said good luck to the House of Saud as if the House of Saud (a dynasty that has ruled for less than 300 years and moreover not most of modern-day KSA for most of that amount of time) is all that Arabia, which is one of the most historical regions in the world home to some of the oldest civilizations and the second oldest recorded presence of humans, could amount to. Let alone all the numerous historical dynasties that have ruled Arabia and originated from Arabia. Just in the Islamic age alone (1300 years of Caliphate rule), 900 + years were ruled by Arabian (Hijazi) dynasties.

This amounts to me saying good luck to your military (who are the real rulers of your country) or good luck to a few corrupt Pakistani political dynasties. You know their names very well. You don't get it though it seems.


KSA is composed of almost 30 million locals (and growing). House of Saud, while the current dynasts, only represent a minuscule percentage of KSA's population.

Should, could, would. If you knew anything about KSA you would have known that no, it could not have been done earlier for various reasons.

You should not worry about work ethic as Saudi Arabians are one of the most educated people in the entire Muslim and developing world, if not the most educated percentage wise and as a ratio to the total population. Right now several successful Saudi Arabian scientists, businessmen, large international Saudi Arabian firms etc. are having a lot of success and this will only improve by each day.

Nothing wrong with men on the countryside (looks like some mountain village) celebrating a wedding. Nobody was hurt. Speaking about murder, KSA has one of the lowest murder rates in the world.


Didn't realize the term "House of Saud" was a derogatory term causing you to go off on a 500 word tantrum!

Breath... shawwayaa, shawwayaa
 
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Excellent, this is required, as I've always mentioned, but can anyone tell me why are they planning it so close to Israel's borders?
 
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Didn't realize the term "House of Saud" was a derogatory term causing you to go off on a 500 word tantrum!

Breath... shawwayaa, shawwayaa

I am a Hijazi Hashemite so what do you expect? In all seriousness I am liking very much what I have seen so far from MbS and I know from relatives and family friends that the people that he surrounds himself with are highly educated, ambitious and dedicated. I have zero reason to believe that Saudi Arabia Vision 2030 and other grand projects will fail.

The point here is that this is not "project House of Saud" but "project Saudi Arabia". Similar to how projects in China are not made for the sake of the one-party state rule (communism on paper) but for the sake of China and its people. Or in Pakistan where it is not about the military or a few corrupt political families but the Pakistani state and people. Or at least it should be. Such hidden provocations won't be tolerated as I am familiar with such games.

I am calm on PDF and the internet always.
 
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I am a Hijazi Hashemite so what do you expect? In all seriousness I am liking very much what I have seen so far from MbS and I know from relatives and family friends that the people that he surrounds himself with are highly educated, ambitious and dedicated. I have zero reason to believe that Saudi Arabia Vision 2030 and other grand projects will fail.

The point here is that this is not "project House of Saud" but "project Saudi Arabia". Similar to how projects in China are not made for the sake of the one-party state rule (communism on paper) but for the sake of China and its people. Such hidden provocations won't be tolerated as I am familiar with such games.

I am calm on PDF and the internet always.


I'm actually excited with this NEOM city project... pakistan should look into linking CPEC with this initiative by direct connection and providing Saudi a SEZ in Gwadar with a 100 year lease. ... Win-win win
 
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Some random photos of the ancient and historical Tabuk province where the historical and landmark NEOM megacity will be located (continuation of post 23 and 25 in this thread):

DLZxpLOX4AItm2d.jpg


DLZxsooX4AUgA9B.jpg


DLZx_cTW0AABAdj.jpg


DLZyDlSW0AAHfnU.jpg


TabukIslands.jpg

curve.png


9625493833_4ae04eecac_b.jpg

حقل by Faisal Almaiman, on Flickr

TabukBeaches.jpg
















DLd7dE7WkAA3cD3.jpg


DGpqtoFWAAU5L0p.jpg


An example of one of the many traditional dresses of the Tabuk region:







Tabuk province 31 seconds into the video:


Beautiful video that shows a part of Tabuk province:


Another very nice video:


It snows several times each winter in Tabuk region and temperatures of -15 Celsius are not unheard of during the coldest nights and days. If recorded in the mountains (the mountains in Tabuk region are approximately 2500 meters tall) the temperature of course will be even colder. On the other hand the highest temperature recorded in Tabuk city was 46 Celsius!


1.6 million views (also from Tabuk province):

The thread title is nonsense though as it snows several times each winter in KSA as I wrote.


:lol:

I'm actually excited with this NEOM city project... pakistan should look into linking CPEC with this initiative by direct connection and providing Saudi a SEZ in Gwadar with a 100 year lease. ... Win-win win

KSA will apparently soon join CPEC.

https://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2017/09/22/saudi-arabia-to-join-cpec-saudi-representative/

KSA/GCC will play an important role in China's One Belt One Road Initiative.

KSA’s important role in the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative


http://www.arabnews.com/node/1098871

KSA's largest trading partner is China and you have no idea what is in store or what has been signed just in the past 1 year. We are talking about huge deals. Just recently deals worth 70 billion USD were signed.

https://thediplomat.com/2017/08/closer-ties-china-and-saudi-arabia-sign-70-billion-in-new-deals/
 
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