logo
New Boss Named for World's Biggest Construction Project

New Boss Named for World's Biggest Construction Project

Newsweek19-05-2025

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Saudi Arabia's Neom, the world's largest construction project, has appointed Aiman Al-Mudaifer as its new CEO to fast-track flagship developments including The Line, the cornerstone of the plan for a city more than 100 miles long.
Newsweek has contacted Neom and the Saudi Media Ministry for comment.
Why It Matters
The project is part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's bet on shifting Saudi Arabia from dependence on oil exports to new growth alongside other Gulf and Arab governments that are pouring capital into mega-projects, showcasing cutting-edge technologies to lure global investors and polish their international images.
Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates pledged multi-billion investments during President Donald Trump's visit last week.
Athletes compete during Stage 3 of NEOM Titan Desert Saudi Arabia on Day Nineteen of the NEOM Beach Games on November 21, 2024 in Neom, Saudi Arabia.
Athletes compete during Stage 3 of NEOM Titan Desert Saudi Arabia on Day Nineteen of the NEOM Beach Games on November 21, 2024 in Neom, Saudi Arabia.for NEOM Beach Games
What To Know
Neom announced Mudaifer as its CEO and Managing Director, elevating the interim leader who has served as Acting CEO since 2024 and drawing on his experience in leading the Saudi Public Investment Fund's (PIF) real estate division since 2018 to drive the giga-project forward following the departure of longtime CEO Nadhmi al-Nasr.
Neom has faced repeated budget overruns and delays, with Mudaifer recently launching a full review of project goals and priorities, according to The Financial Times.
The PIF, Neom's principal backer, signed multi-billion-dollar deals with U.S. asset managers following Trump's visit, according to media reports.
The International Monetary Fund has estimated that oil must be at nearly $100 a barrel for the kingdom to balance its funding of Vision 2030 economic transformation.
Saudi Arabia, once a major supplier of crude oil to the United States, has seen a decline in its exports, with price per barrel of little over $62 for benchmark U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude, according to Reuters.
What People Are Saying
NEOM in statement: "Over the past months, Al-Mudaifer has remained focused on maintaining operational continuity, improving efficiencies and accelerating progress across NEOM's strategic projects and regions."
Gulf economist and consultant Justin Alexander told Newsweek: "The confirmation of Aiman Al-Mudaifer as CEO is a positive development for NEOM. He is understood to be a practical and implementation-minded engineer, which is what the project needs after a period that has been too focused on grand concepts, with weak cost management."
Robert Mogielnicki, Senior Resident Scholar at The Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington wrote in March: "Smart, sustainable spending on high-priority projects and initiatives will be crucial for regional governments, especially amid a period of subdued or declining oil prices. Saudi Arabia's social and economic transformation agenda is particularly ambitious and expensive. Saudi officials have started to adjust expectations."
What Happens Next
Observers will be watching to see whether NEOM's new leader can deliver on near-term milestones as the project faces logistical hurdles and allegations of human-rights abuses.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

PIF and FIFA forge partnership for FIFA Club World Cup 2025™
PIF and FIFA forge partnership for FIFA Club World Cup 2025™

Business Wire

timean hour ago

  • Business Wire

PIF and FIFA forge partnership for FIFA Club World Cup 2025™

ZURICH & RIYADH, Saudi Arabia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--PIF and FIFA today announced PIF as an official partner of FIFA Club World Cup 2025™, which will take place in the U.S. from June 14 to July 13, 2025. The partnership reflects FIFA and PIF's shared vision to enable greater participation in sports by unlocking new opportunities, fostering innovation and engaging fans around the world. With a focus on youth, the partnership will provide opportunities for young people, supporting FIFA in its efforts to engage and inspire at a grassroots level. The new FIFA Club World Cup 2025™ marks a fresh chapter for club football on the global stage. It will feature 32 of the world's top football clubs, bringing together champions from all six FIFA confederations for a month-long tournament in 11 cities across the U.S. Romy Gai, Chief Business Officer at FIFA, said: 'We are delighted to welcome PIF as a partner of the FIFA Club World Cup 2025™. Together, we look forward to delivering a historic tournament that inspires and unites fans from around the world. 'The partners of the first-ever 32-team FIFA Club World Cup believe in our vision to make football truly global. Their support of the tournament will not only be integral to its success but will underpin investment in supporting the development of club football everywhere.' Mohammed AlSayyad, Head of Corporate Brand at PIF, said: 'PIF is creating a legacy of transformative impact in sports including through its partnerships, delivering positive and lasting results at every level, from players and fans to host communities. 'PIF is at the forefront of growing football around the world following our Concacaf partnership announced last year and our continued investment in football. We are unlocking opportunities to drive the growth of the sport around the world.' Football plays a crucial role in the ongoing transformation of Saudi Arabia and as host of the FIFA World Cup 2034™, reinforces the country's ambition to grow the game globally, create new opportunities for all and extend its benefits in Saudi Arabia and every part of the world for generations to come. The FIFA Club World Cup 2025™ will be played in 12 stadiums across 11 U.S. host cities. The 63-match tournament will culminate with what promises to be a spectacular final at MetLife Stadium New York New Jersey, on Sunday, July 13, when the FIFA club world champion will be crowned. All tournament fixtures will be live-streamed for free on bringing the excitement of the first edition of the competition to every football fan around the world. Tickets and ticket-inclusive hospitality packages are on sale via ABOUT PIF PIF is the investment engine driving economic transformation for Saudi Arabia and the world. With an ambitious program to deliver Vision 2030, PIF invests in projects, companies and partners to diversify the Saudi economy, stimulate growth in every major sector, and create new opportunities for investment and employment. And as a global investor and catalyst of change, PIF actively partners with the most pioneering organizations across the world to accelerate their growth, and transfer the technology and knowledge needed to build industry ecosystems of the future. Since 2017, PIF has established 103 companies and is driving the transition to a more sustainable economy through strategic investments and partnerships across the Saudi public and private sector. PIF is laying the foundations for local and international partners to invest in the economic and societal transformation of Saudi Arabia.

Republicans Get Worrying Update in Red State Senate Race
Republicans Get Worrying Update in Red State Senate Race

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Republicans Get Worrying Update in Red State Senate Race

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Republicans have received a concerning update about the 2026 Senate election in Iowa as a major election forecaster has reclassified the race as more competitive. Incumbent Senator Joni Ernst, who is running for a third term, recently sparked backlash from many Iowans after saying in response to concerns about potential Medicaid cuts, "Well, we are all going to die." Newsweek has contacted Ernst's campaign for comment via email. Why It Matters Iowa has shifted toward the GOP over the past decade, with President Donald Trump securing a 13-point victory in the state in 2024. However, one Democratic strategist told Newsweek that Ernst was making the race "more competitive every day," and the national party is eying the state as a potential flip. Democrats are targeting GOP-held seats in Maine, which Trump lost, and North Carolina, which he won by 3 points. They're also defending seats in Trump-won Georgia and Michigan, but there are no other obvious flip opportunities for the party. So Democrats' chances of retaking the Senate in 2026 hinge on their ability to make competitive races in states Trump carried by double digits, such as Alaska, Florida, Iowa, Ohio and Texas. Senator Joni Ernst, a Republican from Iowa, at the Hill and Valley Forum in Washington, D.C., on April 30. Senator Joni Ernst, a Republican from Iowa, at the Hill and Valley Forum in Washington, D.C., on April 137 Ventures/Founders Fund/Jacob Helberg What to Know Election forecaster Sabato's Crystal Ball announced this week that it was reclassifying Iowa as a more competitive race, though Ernst is still favored to win reelection next November. The election shifted from "Safe Republican" to "Likely Republican" in the forecaster's latest Senate ratings. In a report explaining the change, forecasters J. Miles Coleman and Kyle Kondik wrote that Ernst would be running in a "more challenging environment than she faced in either of her previous two elections." "In 2014, she won as part of a broader GOP wave—and she got help from a gaffe-prone opponent. Six years later, she won reelection as Trump was carrying Iowa by a strong margin (Ernst ran a little bit behind Trump)," they wrote. "It's possible that 2026 could be like 2018: Iowa did not have a Senate election that year, but Democrats did end up winning three of the state's four U.S House seats that year, and we suspect that if Iowa had had a Senate election, it likely at least would have been close." Iowa Democratic strategist Jeff Link told Newsweek that Ernst was making the race more competitive "every day" despite Republicans' "substantial voter registration edge in the state." "She ran as an outsider and in just two terms has become the consummate Washington insider, telling Iowans to essentially 'take what you get' from Washington," he said. "That's a very different candidate that was elected in 2014." So far, Ernst has drawn two challengers on the Democratic side. Nathan Sage, a Marine Corps veteran who leads the Knoxville Chamber of Commerce, and Iowa state Representative J.D. Scholten—who almost unseated former U.S. Representative Steve King, a Republican, in a deeply conservative district in 2018. State Senator Zach Wahls is also speculated to be considering jumping into the Democratic primary. A May poll showed Sage with an early lead against Ernst, though other surveys into the race have not been released. Coleman and Kondik said Ernst's initial town hall remarks "did not really tempt us to immediately move off our Safe Republican rating for her race," but that her response to the backlash seemed to be "daring Democrats to make an effort in Iowa." What People Are Saying Iowa Democratic strategist Jeff Link told Newsweek: "We have three candidates who bring youth and energy to this race. For a Democrat to succeed, they need to listen to Iowans, particularly in rural Iowa, and bring a populist perspective that stands up for the average Iowan rather than the lobbyists and Washington insiders." Rachel Paine Caufield, a professor and co-chair of Drake University's Department of Political Science, previously told Newsweek: "Democrats are energized. Iowa Democrats are frustrated and are really looking to mobilize to push back against Donald Trump and reclaim at least one house of Congress, so you might see renewed energy on the Democratic side." Iowa Democratic Senate candidate Nathan Sage told local outlet The Gazette: "I'm out here trying to bring a little bit more of a voice of working-class individuals to Washington and fight for them to have a better life, instead of trying to survive every day. Trying to actually make Iowans thrive." Nick Puglia, a spokesperson for the National Republican Senatorial Committee, told The Hill in May: "It doesn't matter which radical Democrat gets nominated in their messy primary because Iowans are going to re-elect Senator Joni Ernst to keep fighting for them in 2026." What Happens Next Iowa's primary elections are scheduled for June 2, 2026, with the general election following on November 3. It remains to be seen whether other candidates will announce runs, and as the race draws closer, further polling may indicate how competitive it will be. Sabato's Crystal Ball also ranked Senate races in Ohio and Texas as "Likely Republican." Maine's Senate race was marked "Leans Republican," while races in Georgia, Michigan and North Carolina were toss-ups. Minnesota and New Hampshire's Senate races were classified as "Leans Democrat."

Trump Responds to Elon Musk Big Bill Criticism
Trump Responds to Elon Musk Big Bill Criticism

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Trump Responds to Elon Musk Big Bill Criticism

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. 🎙️ Voice is AI-generated. Inconsistencies may occur. President Donald Trump has responded to his ally Elon Musk's blistering criticism of his "big, beautiful bill." Musk has called the bill "outrageous" and "pork-filled" and attacked Republicans for supporting it. On Wednesday, in the Oval Office, Trump said that he'd rather Musk "criticize me than criticize the bill." This is a breaking news story, updates to follow.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store