Search Site

Trends banner

Borouge Q1 net profit $281 million

The total dividend paid to shareholders in 2024 $1.3bn.

Emirates expects first 777X delivery in H2 2026

Boeing had pushed back the first delivery to 2026 from 2025.

Aramco, unit and Sinopec ink $4bn deal

The two companies will establish a joint venture company.

Etihad unveils new A321LR aircraft

A321LR features First Suite - a private, enclosed space with a sliding door.

stc Group Q1 net profit up 11.05%

The Group reported a revenue of $5.12 billion.

‘Saudi to invest US$266bn in cleaner energy’

Soaring crude prices following Russia's invasion of Ukraine allowed Saudi Arabia to post in 2022 its first budget surplus in nine years. (Aramco)
  • Despite its goal of achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2060, Saudi Arabia remains hugely dependent on crude oil exports.
  • The Saudi minister said the Kingdom is determined to be the leading exporter of clean hydrogen.

RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA – Saudi Arabia plans to invest more than US$266 billion to produce cleaner electricity and expand its power grid, the kingdom’s energy minister said Monday.

Speaking at a forum organized by Saudi oil giant Aramco, Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said the world’s biggest crude exporter was also looking to become a global leader in hydrogen production.

“We are introducing over a trillion riyals ($266 billion) worth of investment by 2030 to address our plans to achieve cleaner forms of electricity within the kingdom as well as expanding and modernizing the power transmission and distribution grid,” he said.

“On the hydrogen front, we are determined to be the leading exporter as well as availing clean hydrogen for local usages in heavy industries to produce green products,” he told the seventh annual IKTVA forum in Dhahran in a speech.

The kingdom would also double down on carbon capture solutions.

“We are no longer going to build any future power generation without carbon capture,” the Saudi minister said.

Despite its goal of achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2060, Saudi Arabia remains hugely dependent on crude oil exports that have powered its growth for decades, raising doubts about its potential for an economic makeover any time soon.

Soaring crude prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine allowed the kingdom to post in 2022 its first budget surplus in nine years, giving it the financial firepower for economic development.