Home GCC Saudi Arabia Saudi Red Sea tourism plan set to clinch $3.7bn green loan It will have a tenor of 15 years and an interest rate of about 1 per cent above the Saudi interbank offered rate by Bloomberg April 20, 2021 Saudi Arabia could be weeks away from clinching the first significant funding package for a key part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s programme to diversify the kingdom’s economy. The Red Sea Development Co.’s SAR14bn ($3.7bn) loan is set to close with a small group of local banks including Saudi National Bank, Banque Saudi Fransi, Riyad Bank and Saudi British Bank, according to people familiar with the matter. The deal to help fund the first phase of the development will be a so-called green loan, with the proceeds used to finance environmentally sustainable investment, the people said, asking not to be identified as the information is private. It will have a tenor of 15 years and an interest rate of about 1 per cent above the Saudi interbank offered rate, they said. The Red Sea Development declined to comment. The company first started approaching banks for the loan in mid-2019. Opening to tourism is one of the ways Saudi Arabia intends to diversify the economy away from oil. Its other ambitious projects include an entertainment hub near the capital, and a new city in the north-west called Neom that’s expected to cost $500bn to build. Owned by the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, the Red Sea Development will oversee a luxury tourism zone equivalent in size to Belgium. When the entire project is completed in 2030, it will target 1 million visitors a year, split evenly between domestic and international tourists. Construction of a new international airport for the area has begun, and the first phase of the project is due to be completed with the opening of four hotels at the end of 2022 and 12 more the following year, chief executive officer John Pagano said in an interview in November. Tags Green Loan Saudi Arabia The Red Sea Development Company tourism 0 Comments You might also like Efficio’s Adam Forgács on local content’s role in economic diversification Trump’s policies may hit EMs, but Saudi stays safe: Citigroup Lenovo, world’s largest PC maker, to launch factory in Saudi Arabia Saudi-backed Pony AI seeks $4.5bn valuation in US IPO