In a bid to replicate the success in cities such as Dubai and Qatar, Saudi Arabia has hatched a £12 billion plan to establish itself as a major player in global tourism.
As part of the country’s Vision 2030 economic diversification plan to enlarge its airline sector, Saudi Arabia has ordered 105 Airbus planes worth £12 billion at list prices.
The A320 double-engine planes will be split between state-owned Saudia – the existing flag carrier – and its low-cost subsidiary Flyadeal, according to a statement released on Monday.
The strategy, aimed at establishing the country as a major player in global air travel, involves pouring investment into tourist-friendly attractions such as museums, marine life centres and an opera house, a new airport.
Urban developments such as the nearly £400 million Neom “smart city” – originally set to be 33 times the size of New York – are also in the works, in a bid to help diversify the kingdom’s economy.
This project, however, has already been scaled back from the planned 105-mile site to just 1.4 miles after three quarters of economic contraction in a row.
It also seeks to reduce the country’s reliance on oil exports, which currently needs to be sold at about £75 a barrel or more to balance the state budget, according to the International Monetary Fund. Currently, prices are over £10 below this.
Since late 2022, Saudi Arabia and other major oil-producing nations in the Opec+ cartel have been cutting output because they could not compete with the United States’ higher production rates. All this has resulted in the government facing a budget deficit of £16.8bn this year.
It aims to replicate the success of Dubai and Qatar in the country’s capital of Riyadh, exploiting the Middle East’s position as a pitstop for flights between Asia, Africa, Europe and North America. Thus, it has established a second flag carrier – Riyadh Air – where it plans to establish a network of over 100 destinations across six continents using a fleet of Boeing 787s.
Saudia, based in Jeddah, operates both domestic and international flights, including a high-capacity charter service to the Hajj pilgrimage in Mecca which welcomes millions of visitors every year.
The new Airbus jets – the majority being A321s – will be used on short-haul routes, with about half of them going to Flyadeal, a rival to Emirates subsidiary FlyDubai in the Middle East’s rapidly emerging low-cost travel sector.
Ibrahim Al-Omar, the group’s director general, said the order will allow the company to deliver on “ambitious operational objectives to meet growing demand” as Vision 2030 attracts higher tourist numbers.
People wishing to travel to the United Kingdom will soon need a new travel authorization to do so. Starting on Jan. 8, United States citizens — including chil
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