Arab News
Kuwait times,
Mon, Oct 13, 2025 | Rabi al-Thani 21, 1447
Saudi Arabia tops GCC projects market in Q3: report
Saudi Arabia:
Saudi Arabia led the Gulf Cooperation Council’s
projects market in the third quarter of 2025 with $28.1 billion in contract
awards, a new report showed.
According to Kamco Invest, this represented 51.3
percent of total GCC awards — just over half of regional activity.
Across the region, total GCC contract awards fell
27 percent year on year to $54.8 billion in the third quarter, with nine-month
awards down 30.5 percent to $154.4 billion.
In its report, Kamco stated: “Contract awards are
expected to gain momentum in the fourth quarter of the year, driven primarily by
recoveries in Saudi Arabia and the UAE.”
It added: “However, despite a strong project
pipeline, overall project awards in 2025 in the GCC are expected to decline and
fall short of the 2024 record contract awards.”
Sectorally, six of the GCC’s eight
industries recorded year-on-year declines in the third quarter. Construction
dropped 62.4 percent to $11.1 billion and power decreased 13.3 percent to $17.1
billion, while gas and oil were the only sectors to post growth.
Within Saudi Arabia, power led with $9.8 billion
in awards, compared with $17.1 billion a year earlier, while construction
totaled $5.2 billion; there were no chemical sector awards and oil stood at $3.9
billion.
Notable awards included an $853 million road
package for Almabani General Contractors and a $167 million contract for a
Pirelli tyre plant in King Abdullah Economic City. Over the first nine months,
awards nearly halved to $61.5 billion from $116.6 billion.
Saudi Arabia’s lead comes as contracts awarded
under its giga-projects surged 20 percent in 2025 to $196 billion, according to
Knight Frank.
The report said the increase reflects a clear
shift from planning to execution across major developments, particularly in real
estate, tourism, and infrastructure, signaling steady progress in the Kingdom’s
Vision 2030 diversification drive.
Kamco’s report stated: “Overall project
activity in Saudi Arabia has been sluggish throughout 2025. However, the
Kingdom’s broader economic performance has been better than previously
expected.”
In the UAE, third-quarter awards fell 65.8 percent
year on year to $6.7 billion, moving the country from the GCC’s largest projects
market in the second quarter to third place in the third quarter.
Over the first nine months, awards declined 18.0
percent to $59.7 billion. Construction led with $5.4 billion despite a 56.2
percent slide, and there were no oil and gas awards in the quarter.
Major announcements included a $593 million
contract for Sharjah’s Madar Mall and a $300 million award for the Erisha Smart
Manufacturing Hub in Ras Al-Khaimah.
Qatar was a bright spot, with contract awards
jumping 115.9 percent year on year to $13.6 billion in the third quarter and
rising 27.6 percent to $20.5 billion over the first nine months, supported by
preparations for the 2030 Asian Games.
Oil and gas led sector allocations, and China
Offshore Oil Engineering won roughly $4 billion of contracts for the Bul Hanine
offshore field.
Kuwait’s market improved, with third-quarter
awards up 33.8 percent year on year to $4.3 billion and first-nine-months awards
up 25.3 percent to $7 billion.
The quarter was dominated by the $4 billion Al
Zour North IWPP phases two and three, alongside an $84 million upstream oil
contract and a $65 million public-buildings package in Al Mutlaa Residential
City.
Looking ahead, Kamco expects awards to gain
momentum in the fourth quarter on recoveries in Saudi Arabia and the UAE,
although full-year 2025 awards are still seen finishing below 2024’s record.
The GCC’s pre-execution pipeline totals about
$1.78 trillion, led by construction with $624.2 billion, transport with $300
billion and power with $294.2 billion.
Saudi Arabia accounts for roughly $887 billion of
upcoming projects and the UAE $434.0 billion; Saudi Aramco plans 99 projects
over the next three years and currently has about $50 billion of engineering,
procurement, and construction contracts under execution.