Arab News,
Mon, Dec 09, 2024 | Jumada al-Aakhirah 7, 1446
Saudi Arabia and UK forge deeper ties in trade, tourism and innovation
Saudi Arabia:
Saudi Arabia and the United Kingdom are
solidifying their partnership through expanded collaborations in key sectors,
including finance, trade, tourism and innovation.
The strategic alignment reflects both countries’
shared aspirations for economic growth and diversification, with Saudi Arabia
leveraging its Vision 2030 initiative and the UK seeking stronger ties in the
Gulf region.
Recent high-level discussions underscore a mutual
commitment to bolstering bilateral trade, setting ambitious targets, and
fostering cross-industry synergies.
These efforts are underpinned by cultural
exchanges, increased tourism flows, and cooperative initiatives in emerging
sectors such as clean technology and heritage preservation.
According to data from the UK government’s
Department for Business and Trade, total trade in goods and services with Saudi
Arabia reached £17.6 billion ($22.4 billion) in the year ending March 2024.
During a top ministerial meeting in Riyadh in
September between Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Commerce Majid Al-Qasabi and the
UK’s Secretary of State for Business and Trade Jonathan Reynolds, officials
discussed a target to increase bilateral trade to £30 billion ($39.6 billion) by
2030.
After the meeting, Al-Qasabi noted the
implementation of 79 initiatives in 13 economic sectors to strengthen
Saudi-British relations that have led to more than 30 percent growth between
2018 and 2023.
“Economic growth is this government’s driving
mission, and boosting trade and investment with some of the world’s biggest
economies is crucial to that,” Reynolds said in a statement.
The Kingdom was the UK’s 23rd largest trading
partner in the four quarters to the end of the year’s first quarter, accounting
for 1 percent of total UK trade.
Chairwoman of the Saudi British Joint Business
Council Jennie Gubbins spoke to Arab News in November 2023 and said that
bilateral trade between Saudi Arabia and the UK had increased 68 percent in the
previous year.
She said at the time: “This is just a really
exciting time. The relationship between Saudi Arabia and the UK, I think, is
better than I’ve ever seen it, and I’ve been working between the UK and the
Middle East for a long time.
“People who don’t know what’s going on in Saudi
Arabia think maybe it’s oil stuff. but it’s all about … a huge growth in the
technology (sector). Things like clean tech, fintech, healthtech, huge interest
in all of those things,” Gubbins said.
She also said that the council uses Saudi Arabia’s
Vision 2030 as a “blueprint” to direct them toward the areas to focus on with
continual growth.
Gubbins highlighted that Saudi mega-project NEOM
opening its first international office in London is not surprising considering
that Britons are the second-largest group of expatriates working at NEOM.
During a November event at the British Embassy,
Neil Crompton, the ambassador to Saudi Arabia, pointed out that the partnership
between the two countries has expanded from traditional defense partnerships to
include variable sectors such as tourism, people-to-people relations, and
sports, especially since Vision 2030 was announced.
The tourism sector is an area of promising growth,
with more British sports personalities, such as the cricketer Kevin Pietersen,
visiting Saudi Arabia and many Saudis regularly traveling to London for
holidays.
“I think the affection between the two countries
is amazing,” Crompton said. “Since we introduced the visa waiver system in June
2022, over 500,000 Saudis have used it to go to London, in addition to the
100,000 who already had a 10-year visa or another passport.”
At the Great Futures Conference in May, the Saudi
Tourism Authority and VisitBritain, the UK’s national tourism agency, signed a
declaration of intent to develop and grow tourism.
VisitBritain has predicted there will be 240,000
visitors to the UK from Saudi Arabia this year, a 9 percent increase from 2019.
At the event, Saudi Tourism Minister Ahmed
Al-Khateeb said that the Kingdom had welcomed more than 165,600 British tourists
and issued 560,462 e-visas for British visitors since 2019.
The former UK Secretary of State for Culture,
Media, and Sport Lucy Frazer told Arab News: “We’ve always had a very strong
relationship, but that relationship is getting closer as Saudi Arabia undergoes
this huge societal and economic change.”
She added: “It’s so dynamic and it’s got so many
ambitions for the future. And in the UK, we would like to be a strong partner in
that. So we’re collaborating in a number of areas sharing knowledge, sharing
expertise, sharing best practice.”
A heritage agreement between Historic England and
the Saudi Ministry of Culture was also discussed to encourage joint training and
sharing expertise in terms of the restoration of palaces and historic buildings.