
Saudi Arabia to Build 3,000 Electric Golf Carts Locally
A new manufacturing partnership will produce over 3,000 electric golf carts in Saudi Arabia over the next two years, creating jobs while powering the country's growing tourism and construction sectors. The locally assembled vehicles will serve hotels, resorts, and major development projects across the Kingdom.
Saudi Arabia is getting its first electric golf cart assembly plant, bringing green transportation to the country's booming tourism and construction industries.
Samara Land Transportation Services and Egypt's Raya Holding announced Tuesday they're launching a joint manufacturing venture in the Kingdom. The partnership will produce more than 3,000 electric golf carts over the next two years, all assembled locally by Saudi workers.
The timing couldn't be better. Saudi Arabia's massive development projects, from luxury resorts to new urban centers, need efficient ways to move people around sprawling properties. Traditional gas-powered carts don't fit the country's sustainability goals, and importing electric ones has been the only option until now.
The new facility will do more than just assemble vehicles. It will train local technicians, provide comprehensive repair services, and develop homegrown expertise in electric mobility. That means jobs, skills transfer, and a foundation for future green transportation projects.
Samara brings deep knowledge of Saudi Arabia's market needs, while Raya Auto contributes proven manufacturing experience from Egypt's electric vehicle sector. Together, they're creating what they call a "Saudi-assembled" standard for electric mobility.

The carts will serve hotels, tourist destinations, construction sites, and the Kingdom's ambitious new city projects. They offer quiet, zero-emission transportation perfect for environments where noise and air pollution matter.
The Ripple Effect
This partnership shows how green technology can take root when local expertise meets international experience. By building the carts in Saudi Arabia instead of importing them, the venture creates manufacturing jobs and keeps more money circulating in the local economy.
The project aligns with Vision 2030, Saudi Arabia's plan to diversify beyond oil and build sustainable industries. Every cart assembled represents a small step toward that future, one where the Kingdom produces its own clean technology instead of just consuming it.
The after-sales service network being built alongside the factory matters too. Training Saudi technicians to maintain electric vehicles creates lasting knowledge that can expand to other green transportation projects as the country continues its transformation.
For workers joining the venture, it's a chance to gain skills in an industry that's growing worldwide. The experience of building and servicing electric vehicles today could open doors to careers in the broader green economy tomorrow.
Saudi Arabia is betting big on tourism and sustainable development, and it needs the infrastructure to match those ambitions.
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Based on reporting by Regional: saudi arabia development (SA)
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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