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Tuesday, November 10 - 2009

GCC wastewater treatment capacity to double by 2015

  • United Arab Emirates: Monday, May 04 - 2009 at 08:12
  • PRESS RELEASE

Despite the onset of the worst economic downturn in a decade, the outlook for the GCC wastewater sector remains bright with almost $10bn of investment planned in new treatment capacity up to 2015.

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According to GCC Wastewater 2009, a new report published this week by MEED Insight, sewage treatment capacity will have to more than double over the next six years as utilities seek to meet robust demand and replace antiquated infrastructure.

The existing wastewater infrastructure has been under severe pressure since 2004 when strong economic growth, an expanding population base and an upsurge in real estate activity led to significant increases in sewage inflows and serious overloading at treatment plants across the region.

The late 2008 collapse in the oil price and subsequent real estate downturn put a brake on the runaway growth in demand, particularly in Dubai where leading real estate developers have cancelled or reduced in scope a string of sewage treatment plant (STP) projects in response to the real estate crash.

Elsewhere the meltdown in the project finance market has affected wastewater privatisation programmes in Abu Dhabi, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.

"The impact on the wastewater treatment sector outside Dubai is expected to be temporary. Given the high rates of indigenous population growth in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Oman, the demand for new wastewater facilities is likely to remain robust," the report states.

"It is expected that an easing in the project finance market, which could take effect in the second half of 2009, would revive Saudi Arabia's and Bahrain's planned introduction of the private sector into the wastewater treatment sector for the first time."

According to the 57 page GCC Wastewater 2009 report, population growth is not the only driver of new wastewater capacity.

"Across much of the region, the existing STP infrastructure is more than 20 years old and incapable of meeting the demands of today, both in terms of handling volumes and treating effluent to international standards. It has become a priority, therefore, for utility providers across the region to take existing plants out of service and replace them with new capacity."

The report forecasts that in the period 2009-15, Saudi Arabia will be the largest investor in new treatment capacity followed by the UAE and Kuwait.

The good news for wastewater providers is that the cost of building this extra capacity is likely to fall by 20-30% in 2009, as a result of declining material prices and increasing contractor competition, due to contracting workloads.

"These costs reductions will encourage the region's utilities to press ahead with their works programmes again, after serious delays were experienced in the final quarter of 2008 and the early 2009, due to the intense uncertainty over costs and in some cases, the future demand outlook," the report says.

GCC Wastewater 2009: the drive for capacity provides comprehensive insight on:

• Anticipated new treatment capacity and investments to 2015
• The role of the private sector and technology in developing new capacity
• Overviews of the six GCC wastewater markets
• The key players involved
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MEED is internationally recognised as providing essential business intelligence for anyone doing business in, or with, the Middle East and North Africa. With journalists and contacts across the entire Middle East and North Africa region, MEED provides reliable, up-to-date business news, analysis and data in both print and online.

MEED Insight offers you the ability to commission in-depth, focused research and analysis, completely tailored for your organisation - helping you to gain insight on market size and potential, new opportunities and risk, macroeconomic and industry data.

Written by MEED utility specialists Karin Maree and Elizabeth Bains, the full GCC Wastewater 2009: the drive for capacity report is now available to buy for US$2,500. For more information about the research services offered by MEED Insight please contact:

Email: insight@meed.com
Telephone: +971 (0) 4 367 1302
Online: www.meed.com/insight

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