National mining champion Maaden has a USD 110 bn investment roadmap through 2040, with targets to double gold production by 2030 and triple phosphate capacity to become the world’s largest exporter, CEO Bob Wilt said at the Future Minerals Forum (watch, runtime: 12:31). The roadmap underpins a shift in the Saudi mining sector as the government looks to focus on expansion and localization. As part of a “strategy refresh” to unlock the Kingdom's untapped mineral wealth, Maaden’s roadmap will also see the company hire 5k new employees.
National mining investment targets doubled: The National Investment Strategy now aims to raise annual mining capital to SAR 92 bn between 2025 and 2030, up from SAR 45 bn in 2024, state news agency SPA quoted Investment Minister Khalid Al Falih as saying. The plan targets doubling foreign direct investment by offering internal rates of return of 20% to 30%.
A full Saudi gold supply chain: Saudi Gold Refinery now manages the entire supply chain from extraction to final product, Chairman Suliman Al Othaim told AlArabiya, saying that “today the gold is Saudi, and the bullion is Saudi.”
Bridging the operational IP gap: Industrial and Mineral Resources Minister Bandar Al Khorayef signed three MoUs with Canada, Chile and Brazil — three of the world’s most sophisticated mining jurisdictions — to localize know-how, the ministry’s spokesman said in a statement on X. The agreements focus on technical cooperation, knowledge exchange, and investment in the mining sector.
Why it matters: This marks the “sourcing” phase of the Kingdom’s industrial strategy as the Kingdom positions itself as a neutral facilitator in a market shaped by US-China trade tensions over critical minerals such as lithium and copper. Through these agreements, the Kingdom is laying the diplomatic and regulatory groundwork to channel its capital into global mining projects while bringing in Western and Latin American expertise to help develop its own mineral resources in the Arabian shield.
Manara is getting spun off
Public Investment Fund (PIF) and Maaden JV Manara Minerals will be spun off from the sovereign wealth fund, Al Khorayef tells Reuters. The decision to spin off Manara comes as the JV has fallen short on investing in critical minerals abroad, closing only its USD 2.5 bn acquisition of a 10% stake in Vale Base Metals in 2024.
A sharpened focus: “PIF is a large investor, but they don’t have mining expertise,” Al Khorayef said, telling the newswire that separating the two will push Manara “from being only an investment vehicle to having more technical capability.”
What’s in store for the spin-off: While Al Khorayef did not disclose details on the expected timeline for the move, he noted that there are “discussions over new shareholders in Manara,” with the floor being open to both Saudi and foreign investors.


