Skip to content
Government Federal

Saudi Electricity Company Achieves 30% Increase in 2025 Sustainability Rating Compared to 2024, According to S&P

???? ????? ?????? ??????? ???????? 2 mins read

The Saudi Electricity Company (SEC) has achieved a significant milestone in its Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) performance, as evaluated by S&P Global.

RIYADH, SA / ACCESS Newswire / July 27, 2025 / The Saudi Electricity Company (SEC) has achieved a significant milestone in its Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) performance, as evaluated by S&P Global. The company scored 65 out of 100, marking a 30% increase compared to its 2024 score, and an 85% improvement over its 2023 rating. This accomplishment highlights SEC's strategic progress and reinforces its position as a regional leader and a benchmark for sustainable excellence in the energy sector. Notably, SEC's score exceeds the global utilities sector average of 39 points by 66%, demonstrating its strong commitment to sustainable development. The rating reflects SEC's comprehensive institutional commitment to sustainability, driven by effective governance frameworks, ambitious strategies, and tangible improvements in environmental and social performance. SEC also showcased proactive disclosure aligned with leading international sustainability reporting standards. This progress further underscores SEC's alignment with Saudi Vision 2030, particularly in advancing sustainable energy, enhancing transparency, strengthening investor confidence, and adopting global ESG best practices. SEC reaffirmed its commitment to continuously improving its ESG performance by deeply embedding sustainability across all operations, positioning itself as a trusted and responsible energy provider both regionally and globally.

Contact Information

Saudi Electricity Company (SEC)
Media Relations Department
[email protected]
Unified Call Center: 920000222

SOURCE: شركة صانعي الخيال للدعاية والإعلان



View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

Media

More from this category

  • Environment, Government Federal
  • 13/02/2026
  • 11:29
The Climate Council

Another coal approval, more climate harm for Australians

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 13TH FEBRUARY 2026 TheAlbanese Government’s approval of the expansion and extension of Queensland’s Middlemount Coal Mine will lock in millions of tonnes of additional climate pollution and intensify heatwaves, bushfires, floods and cyclones. This is the Albanese Government’s 35th fossil fuel approval. The approval will allowMiddlemount Coal Mine to continue extracting up to 5.7 million tonnes of coal every year until 2053. The extension is expected to emit an additional 283,000 tonnes of climate pollution each year on average, up to 6.1 million tonnes in total – equivalent to taking almost 80 million flights from Sydney to…

  • Government Federal, Indigenous
  • 13/02/2026
  • 08:55
Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory (AMSANT)

AMSANT welcomes new Closing the Gap investment as progress remains critical

The Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory (AMSANT) today noted the Prime Minister’s annual statement on the National Agreement on Closing the Gap. It welcomes the Federal Government’s latest investments to build progress, particularly investment in health infrastructure and measures to reduce the cost of food in remote stores. AMSANT Chair Rob McPhee said these initiatives signal growing recognition of the deep and complex challenges facing Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory. ‘We welcome the commitment to improve access to Aboriginal employment in the health sector, reduce the cost of groceries in remote communities, and strengthen support for services that…

  • General News, Government Federal
  • 13/02/2026
  • 08:00
e61 Institute

Aussies couple up with people of similar socio-economic status: New research

Australians are coupling up with people of similar socio-economic status, perpetuating inequality and fuelling house price growth in cities, according to new research by the e61 Institute. The analysis of 2021 Census data finds that in 38% of working age couples, both partners have a university degree, far higher than would occur under random matching. Bachelor’s degree holders, for example, are about 85% more likely to partner with another bachelor’s graduate than chance would predict. Coupling up based on social-economic background is known as assortative mating. “Because higher education is strongly linked to lifetime earnings, this means higher incomes are…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.