Arab News
Arab news, Sat, Jun 14, 2025 | Dhu al-Hijjah 18, 1446
Saudi-UK ties deepen as 400+ leaders boost investment partnerships in London
Saudi Arabia:
Saudi-UK business ties are set to grow
as more than 400 leaders from various sectors gathered in London to explore
cross-border investment opportunities and strengthen economic partnerships.
Minister of Investment Khalid Al-Falih led the
Kingdom’s delegation at the UK-Saudi Investment and Partnership Summit held on
June 11 at Mansion House in London’s financial district.
The Kingdom and the UK are strengthening economic
ties, with bilateral trade hitting $21.6 billion in 2023 and a shared target of
$37.5 billion by 2030, driven by the UK-GCC Free Trade Agreement negotiations
and the UK’s GREAT Futures campaign.
Investment flows remain strong, with Saudi Arabia
investing over $21 billion in the UK since 2017, including $3.5 billion in the
northeast, while UK foreign direct investment in the Kingdom reached $13 billion
by 2023.
Organized by the UK-British Joint Business Council
and hosted by the City of London Corp., the summit was supported by the Saudi
Ministry of Investment and the UK Department for Business and Trade, the Saudi
Press Agency reported.
According to Al-Falih, the Kingdom and the UK
share a bold vision for global leadership and a longstanding legacy of
international trade.
“More than 30,000 UK British professionals reside
in Saudi Arabia, and British investment in the Kingdom exceeds £14 billion,
reflecting the bright future of the partnership between the two countries,” the
minister said in a post on his X handle.
Al-Falih delivered the keynote speech,
highlighting investment opportunities in infrastructure, financial services, and
the green economy, as over 400 leaders gained insights into evolving markets and
emerging investment trends.
The minister also engaged in a high-level
ministerial dialogue with UK Investment Minister Baroness Poppy Gustafsson,
highlighting the evolution of the strategic relationship and the countries’
shared outlook for the future.
“Today, I met with our UK partners— including
Baroness Poppy Gustafsson, minister of investment; His Excellency Ambassador of
the UK to Saudi Arabia Neil Crompton; and the Rt Hon. Lord Mayor of London,
Alastair King— to discuss enhanced investment cooperation and partnership
between our great nations,” Al-Falih said in a post on X.
In a separate post, the Saudi minister said: “At
the historic Mansion House in the City of London, I spoke to an elite group of
global investors, inviting them to explore the exceptional opportunities offered
by Saudi Arabia. I shared insights into our future investment prospects,
particularly in mutually prioritized sectors.”
In his speech, the minister discussed progress
under the Mansion House Accord — a UK-led initiative to unlock up to £50 billion
($63.5 billion) in domestic investment from pension funds into high-growth
sectors.
Panel discussions addressed joint development
priorities aligned with Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 and the UK’s industrial
strategy, Invest 2035 — the UK government’s 10-year plan to provide certainty
and stability for investments in high-growth sectors driving national growth.
Key topics included expanding public-private
partnerships, mobilizing capital for large-scale infrastructure and real estate
projects, supporting venture capital ecosystems, and harnessing frontier
technologies such as deep tech, space, and clean innovation.
The Saudi Ministry of Investment noted that the
summit agenda was designed to encourage practical dialogue, facilitate
cross-border investment flows, and accelerate economic diversification through
sustainable, forward-looking partnerships.
The London meetings followed the launch of the
UK-Saudi Sustainable Infrastructure Assembly in May, a platform uniting
companies, policymakers, and experts from both countries to shape the future of
investment in infrastructure.
The assembly is part of the UK government’s “Great
Futures” campaign, which promotes bilateral cooperation in trade, investment,
tourism, education, and culture. A concluding meeting is planned for the Future
Investment Initiative in Riyadh this fall.
New Saudi offices in the UK, including those of
the Public Investment Fund subsidiaries, NEOM, and Elm, alongside 52 UK firms
establishing regional headquarters in Riyadh, further highlight expanding
cross-border engagement.
Both nations also collaborate in areas such as
energy, financial services, education, and green technologies. London has become
a preferred hub for Saudi capital, with $69.9 billion raised since 2022 — $13.8
billion of which targeted sustainable finance.