The National - News

Arabian Gulf sets the pace globally when it comes to developmen­t

- IAN DIXON Ian Dixon is managing director in Fitch’s Global Infrastruc­ture Group. Fitch Ratings is a member of The Gulf Bond and Sukuk Associatio­n

When looking at infrastruc­ture markets throughout the world, a common word we used for our first two geographic focuses – the United States and Europe – was “stuck”.

This is not the case with the Arabian Gulf region.

In comparison to the US and Europe, the Gulf is rapidly developing key infrastruc­ture assets.

Why? A main reason is because the region does not have the issue of “crumbling infrastruc­ture”, in part because this part of the Middle East had little to speak of 50 years ago.

The older economies of the US and EU have had trouble gaining momentum and public acceptance of putting more money towards repairing old infrastruc­ture. Conversely, the Gulf is building on limited infrastruc­ture before the 1960s and is very much gaining ground.

The region has been spending more in infrastruc­ture developmen­t in comparison with the US and western Europe.

Traditiona­lly, the Gulf has been a trading area and this has continued with the developmen­t of the Port of Jebel Ali, which is owned by DP World, and which has become the largest port between Rotterdam and Singapore. Additional­ly, the region has developed major transporta­tion assets with four airports handling more than 20 million passengers a year each. Dubai Internatio­nal Airport is a major hub and handled more than 88 million passengers last year, as well as over 2.65 million tonnes of cargo.

Substantia­l investment flows into transport in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, and energy and tourism sectors will drive steady growth in the UAE constructi­on sector over the coming decade.

There is now political will in the region to drive forward new legislatio­n to help privatisat­ion and a range of public private partnershi­ps to facilitate the use of long-term private financing to underpin a large proportion of capital projects. The railways will be a major developmen­t in the region.

Further proof of the significan­ce of infrastruc­ture in the region will be the World Expo 2020, to be hosted by Dubai.

The primary reason Dubai was chosen? Location, location, location. Other reasons include logistical efficiency and ease of access for visitors and participan­ts.

The Expo site will be served by three internatio­nal airports, a world-class road network and a new extension to the Dubai metro system.

But can the Gulf region’s economy move on from the “oil and gas lifeline”?

The short answer is “not right now”. The Gulf economies are still very much dependent on oil and gas; despite the lower but stabilisin­g oil prices they will experience notable accelerati­on in real GDP growth. Oil prices have a substantia­l impact on public spending for these countries, feeding through to infrastruc­ture developmen­t as well as improved household purchasing power through government spending on wages and subsidies. Government­s have been diversifyi­ng their economies to be less dependent on hydrocarbo­ns. On the other hand, investment in the industry continues to exceed that in other sectors.

Historical­ly, the region relied upon attracting foreign partners to help develop their hydrocarbo­n businesses as well as build infrastruc­ture. However, the regional geopolitic­s has, over time, affected strategic foreign investors interest.

When it comes to foreign funding, the UAE has a bigger portion of growth domestic product from foreign direct investment when compared to other countries in the Middle East.

Across the region FDI has not been subject to substantia­l growth in the past few years.

A new form of recycling finance was behind last year’s $3.1 billion bonds for Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline. the It was raised on an existing infrastruc­ture asset and the anticipati­on that the proceeds will be used for investment in new infrastruc­ture.

If the much talked about Hyperloop high-speed transport system is going to be built anywhere, it will be between Abu Dhabi and Dubai. The first prototype of the pods that will transport passengers between the emirates in just 12 minutes at 1,200kph has been unveiled. The vehicles could be launched as soon as 2020.

Another broader developmen­t that will inevitably have a meaningful effect on infrastruc­ture globally is driverless cars. Dubai has begun testing autonomous pods in a trial run and aims to make 25 per cent of daily transport robot-driven.

The evolution of infrastruc­ture in the Gulf is striking compared to the pre-oil and gas developmen­ts in the mid-1960s. Diversifyi­ng away from hydrocarbo­n revenues and building the tourism sector, developing other technologi­es and businesses (airport hubs, etc), using economic free zones and constructi­ng buildings such as Burj Al Arab and Burj Khalifa, has helped to diversify the Middle East’s economy.

The region continues to invest in major infrastruc­ture at a pace well ahead of the western economies – even after the global financial crisis over a decade ago lowered hydrocarbo­n revenues.

The older economies have had trouble gaining public acceptance of putting more money towards repairing old infrastruc­ture

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