Saudi delegation visits mainland cities, Hong Kong to tout megalopolis Neom and ‘The Line’ city, seek collaboration
- Seven-day tour includes closed-door forums in Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong to seek potential partners for the ambitious project
- Launched in 2017 by crown prince Mohammed bin Salman, 26,500 sq km project is part of oil-rich nation’s attempt to diversify its economy
A delegation from Saudi Arabia has begun a seven-day visit to major Chinese cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Shenzhen to promote and seek potential partners for its ambitious urban project, Neom.
The trip will feature closed-door forums where notable figures such as Beijing’s mayor and the CEO and chief financial officer of Neom – a planned sustainable desert megapolis near the Red Sea coast – will discuss potential collaboration between Chinese municipal governments and the urban project, according to an agenda viewed by the Post.
The visit will also feature an exhibition, “Discover Neom: a New Future by Design”, where Neom’s executive director Tarek Qaddumi will introduce guests to the main projects within the new urban area. These include Sindalah, a sustainable resort by the Red Sea that will be completed by the end of this year, and The Line, a 170km-long, 200-metre-wide city that aims to house 9 million residents.
“Sindalah is an example of sustainable development where there is a lot of effort taken to safeguard the coastline,” Qaddumi told guests on Monday in Beijing. “This is particularly important because we have the largest coral nursery in the world, and the corals in the Red Sea can withstand temperatures 2 degrees [Celsius] higher than other species [in the world], so this will be a good example to study as we look at temperature rises across the world.”
Calling The Line the “anchor” and “centre” of Neom, Qaddumi said the project will tackle the pressing issue of “exponential growth of population” around the world and the movement of populations from rural to urban areas.
“That rapid growth [in population] is expected to take up land mass equivalent to the size of Germany, France, and Italy combined by 2050, so the solution, which is The Line, provides living space that can host a population of 9 million,” he said.