BY REUTERS | APR 17, 2017,
01.12 PM IST
RIYADH:
Saudi Arabia's government is ordering its ministries and agencies to review
billions of dollars' worth of unfinished infrastructure and economic
development projects with a view to shelving or restructuring them, government
sources said.
Riyadh's Bureau of Capital and Operational
Spending Rationalization, set up last year to make the government more
efficient, is compiling a list of projects that are under 25 percent complete,
the sources told Reuters.
Many of these projects are relics of a decade-long boom of
high oil prices and lavish state spending, which ended when oil began sliding
in mid-2014, making it increasingly difficult for Riyadh to find the money
needed to complete their construction.
Officials will study the feasibility of the
projects in light of the government's reform drive, which aims to diversify the
economy beyond oil exports, and decide whether to suspend them indefinitely or
try to improve how they are conducted.
"Some projects could be retendered so they
can be executed in partnership with the private sector, possibly through
build-operate-transfer (BOT) contracts," said one source familiar with the
plan, declining to be named as the matter is not yet public.
Under BOT contracts, private investors finance and build
projects and operate them for a period of time to earn a profit before
eventually transferring ownership to the government. Riyadh has said it is keen
to begin bringing the private sector into projects to ease pressure on state
finances.
"Other projects could be suspended if they do not meet
the current economic objectives," the source said. Recommendations for
some projects may be made within days, he added.
Seeking to close a huge budget deficit caused by
low oil prices, the government clamped down on infrastructure spending last
year. Finance Minister Mohammed al-Jadaan said in February this year that the
efficiency bureau had so far saved the kingdom 80 billion riyals ($21.33
billion).
The plan to review unfinished projects suggests
the government is looking for large additional savings this year. In a report
at the end of last year, it estimated the cost of completing all capital
spending projects currently underway at about 1.4 trillion riyals.
In a January report, consultants Faithful+Gould
estimated at least $13.3 billion of government projects were at risk of being
cancelled in Saudi Arabia this year because of fiscal pressures and changing
government priorities.
The government is likely to prioritise projects with strong social welfare and
business justifications such as power and water generation, while less
essential "vanity projects" such as sports infrastructure, some
transport systems and perhaps nuclear energy could be cut back, it said.
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