Why You Should Care
Because
the world’s largest oil producer will soon run out of the “good sh*t.”
How Saudi Arabia handles the transition will be a case study for future
students everywhere.
Saudi
Arabia, the Middle East’s biggest economy and the world’s largest oil
producer, is running out of its black gold. Some estimate that the wells
will run dry as early as 2030. That’s a huge deal. Oil revenue reached $312 billion this year and accounts for almost half the economy and 90 percent of export revenue. It also makes the kingdom the Persian Gulf’s economic powerhouse.
That’s why diversification is no longer a luxury. Opening its notoriously insulated stock exchange to
foreign investors and investing in solar power, poultry, dairy,
petrochemicals and innovative technology — these are the threads
stitching together the kingdom’s safety net. Here are the companies
leading the way forward:
SABIC
The Pitch: Global petrochemical leader
Size: $103.4 billion market value
CEO: Mohamed Al-Mady
Recent Moves: Recently crowned the Middle East’s big-biz king,
SABIC is among the world’s largest petrochemical companies.
Petrochemical usually means plastics and fertilizer, but SABIC is
looking ahead with a host of new polycarbonate technologies, like solar
panels, a film for touch screens and the first polycarbonate automobile wheel. Though it’s rolling back European operations, it’s venturing eagerly into the U.S.,
attracted by the shale oil boom. And with Saudi Arabia about to crack
open its stock market to foreign investors, non-oil multinationals are
poised for global prominence. Expect SABIC to receive the most lavish treatment from foreigners.
Glowork
The Pitch: Leading the kingdom’s startup revolution
Size: Acquired for $16 million by SAS Holdings
Founder: Khalid Alkhudair
Recent Moves: To kick their country’s oil addiction, Saudi leaders have launched hundred-million-dollar venture funds and incubators nationwide. The goal? A knowledge-based economy by
2025. The pre-eminent career portal for Saudi women is a poster child
for the kingdom’s startup offensive, not to mention female workplace
empowerment. Glowork’s market is potentially tremendous: A third of
women are unemployed,
and because most of them are college educated, they represent a real
opportunity cost. And a government cost, too, because the jobless
receive $800 a month from the government — a total of $1.6 billion down
the drain, according to Alkhudair.
An oil exploration rig operated by the Saudi Arabian drilling company Saudi Aramco near Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia.
SOURCE
Barry Iverson/Alamy
Saudi Aramco
The Pitch: Jolly green oil giant
Recent Moves: The Saudi government is planning an ambitious solar renaissance —
the kingdom wants its energy mix to include 23 percent solar by 2030
and 39 percent by 2050. With lots of sunshine, low-cost funding and
abundant space, Saudi Arabia has already developed one of the world’s cheapest solar models.
Saudi Arabia might be the site of a perfect solar storm.CEO: Khalid A.
Al-FalihSize: 9.5 million barrels of crude oil production daily; 54,000
employees
Saudi Aramco is poised to helm it. The state-owned behemoth and undisputed world petroleum champion was once valued at
$7 trillion, almost half of the U.S. GDP ($16.8 trillion in 2013). The
coming oil crunch has it staking a claim in solar and other alternative
energies.
Although progress toward solar salvation has been slow, Aramco is still investing heavily in other potentially revolutionary alternative energy solutions. This month, it spearheaded a
$30 million investment in San Francisco-based Siluria Technologies,
which plans to produce low-cost gasoline from natural gas — for $1 per gallon.
Almarai
The Pitch: Moving Saudi Arabia from fuel to food
Size: $10.4 billion market cap; 16,000 employees
Founder: Prince Sultan bin Mohammed bin Saud Al Kabeer
Recent Moves: The region’s largest
food company is in the right place at the right time. Saudi Arabia is
the world’s largest importer of broiler meat, mostly chicken, to the
tune of 875,000 metric tons in 2013. Domestic competitors like Almarai are ripe for growth. Already, poultry production is on the rise in the kingdom and is expected to swell 52 percent by 2018.
Almarai is showing other signs of
international ambition. In partnership with PepsiCo, it launched a $345
million investment in Egypt this June, and its CEO has stated
he plans to boost that figure to $560 million in five years. The funds
will go toward a new juice factory, a 5,000-cow dairy farm and expanding
existing facilities for Egyptian beverage firm Beyti. Drink and eat up!
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