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The National Center for Environmental Compliance (NCEC), working with the Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture (MEWA) and the National Center for Privatization & PPP (NCP), has launched the Expression of Interest (EOI) phase for the Environmental Inspection Project. This milestone marks the beginning of a project that will modernize environmental regulation while advancing Vision 2030 goals. The initiative invites private sector operators to manage inspection services nationwide for ten years, covering facilities across the Kingdom. Private operators are expected to apply advanced technologies, global best practices, and specialized expertise to ensure compliance with environmental laws. The project will raise efficiency, strengthen inspection quality, and expand nationwide coverage. It will also reduce the pressure on public resources while driving innovation in compliance enforcement. By opening this project to local and international investors, Saudi Arabia is reinforcing its commitment to sustainable development and environmental protection.

The Saudi Environmental Inspection PPP focuses on three main goals: efficiency, quality, and coverage. First, efficiency will improve through a higher number of inspections and data-driven decision-making. Digital tools will allow inspectors to process results more quickly, enabling faster action when violations occur. Second, quality will increase as inspectors receive specialized training and access to advanced equipment. This will ensure results that meet international standards. Third, coverage will expand by adopting a risk-based inspection model. This approach combines direct inspections with self-monitoring systems, allowing regulators to reach more facilities with fewer resources. High-risk industries such as petrochemicals, mining, and waste management will receive greater attention, while lower-risk entities will follow self-reporting methods. Together, these steps will create an inspection system that is more reliable, more efficient, and better prepared to support policy decisions at the national level.

Private operators will carry out a wide range of activities throughout the O&M contract period. Their tasks include hiring and training inspectors, supplying vehicles, and providing specialized equipment that meets global standards. They will also design and manage an electronic system that records inspection data and integrates with NCEC’s database. This digital platform will enable predictive analysis, compliance monitoring, and transparent reporting. Operators will inspect around 250,000 facilities nationwide, from industrial plants to smaller enterprises. At the end of the contract, operators must transfer all staff, equipment, and systems back to NCEC or its nominee. This transfer will help the government build long-term institutional capacity while maintaining high-quality inspection services. The scale of the project highlights the importance of logistics, workforce planning, and the adoption of advanced technology.

The Saudi Environmental Inspection PPP directly supports Kingdom’s sustainability agenda. It shifts enforcement from a resource-heavy public model to a more efficient public-private approach. By using modern tools and digital systems, the project will safeguard natural resources, protect communities, and reduce pollution.

Saudi Arabia continues to expand its PPP program across key sectors, and this project is the latest example. Since 2018, the Kingdom has developed a pipeline of around 200 PPP projects spanning energy, education, transport, and healthcare, attracting billions of dollars in investment. The environmental inspection project introduces a fresh dimension by applying the PPP model to regulatory services. It demonstrates how PPPs can extend beyond traditional infrastructure, address governance challenges, and strengthen sustainable development goals.

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