EXCLUSIVE: Saudi Arabia invites prequalification for major sewage treatment plant

12 February 2018
Greenfield sewage treatment plant deal will include operation of existing Jeddah Airport sewage treatment plant

Saudi Arabia’s Water & Electricity Company (WEC) has issued the request for qualification (RFQ) for its planned Jeddah Airport 2 independent sewage treatment project (ISTP).

 

The project is likely to include the development of the greenfield Jeddah Airport 2 sewage treatment plant (STP) under a public-private partnership (PPP) model, in addition to the acquisition, refurbishment, operation and transfer of the existing 350,000 cm/d Jeddah Airport STP, which was originally built under a standard engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract. Developers have been invited to submit prequalification entries by 15 March.

 

MEED reported in January that WEC had extended the deadline to 1 February for companies to submit expressions of interest (EOI) for the planned Jeddah Airport 2 ISTP. 

 

The client had originally set a deadline of 30 November for interested firms to submit EOIs for the project, but has since extended the deadline to give more companies time to register interest in time for the prequalification process and subsequent tender.

The planned Jeddah Airport 2 ISTP will have a treatment capacity of 500,000 cubic metres a day (cm/d), and will be located adjacent to the existing 350,000 cm/d Jeddah Airport sewage treatment plant (STP).

The Jeddah Airport 2 project has faced a number of delays, having already twice been tendered under the EPC model. The project was originally tendered in 2012, but faced numerous delays as the client reconsidered the size and procurement model for the scheme. The STP was retendered as an EPC project in 2015, with the deadline for proposals postponed several times until December 2016. However, the client has now decided to move ahead with the project either as a PPP scheme.

The Jeddah Airport 2 project is the second major STP that the kingdom is planning to proceed with under a public-private partnership (PPP) model.

For the first project, WEC is planning to oversee the development of a 330,000 cm/d ISTP in Dammam, in the eastern province of the kingdom. The project will be developed under a 25-year sewage treatment agreement (STA), under which the sewage capacity will be provided by the National Water Company (NWC). WEC’s obligations under the STA will be guaranteed by a credit support agreement from the Saudi government.

MEED recently reported that WEC had received prequalification entries from 15 companies for the planned Dammam plant.

For both projects, the successful developer will develop the project/bundle under a 25 year STA with WEC, under which the sewage capacity will be provided by NWC.

The advisory team working on the Dammam and Jeddah Airport 2 ISTP projects will be led by Japan’s Mizuho Bank, financial adviser, and will also include UK-based Atkins, owned by Canada’s SNC Lavalin, technical adviser, and US-based law firm White & Case as legal adviser.

The move towards the PPP model for developing STPs is part of the kingdom’s move towards attracting private financing for all future major utility schemes as a result of the severe impact the drop in oil prices is having on the government’s revenues. Privatising utilities is a key part of the kingdom’s Vision 2030 economic reform programme.

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