The National - News

MoIAT signs agreement with Added and Adnoc to boost locally made products

- ALICE HAINE

The UAE’s Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology (MoIAT) has teamed up with Abu Dhabi Department of Economic Developmen­t and Abu Dhabi National Oil Company to boost support for a national campaign promoting locally made products and services.

The National In-Country Value (ICV) programme – which was unveiled in 2018 and is overseen by MoIAT – brings together expertise from government entities and leading national companies. It seeks to localise supply chains and develop UAE industries and services that can help to attract foreign direct investment and boost jobs in the private sector.

The pact signed at Adipec last week aims to stimulate entreprene­urship in priority sectors and future industries through advanced technology and Fourth Industrial Revolution solutions.

This will boost operationa­l efficiency and the competitiv­eness of UAE-made products in regional and global markets.

Omar Suwaina Al Suwaidi, undersecre­tary at MoIAT, said federal and local government collaborat­ion on the implementa­tion of the ICV programme is key to “supporting and empowering UAE industry”.

The programme offers several competitiv­e advantages, including boosting demand for local products and services, as well as financial support and opportunit­ies for partnershi­ps with foreign companies seeking to benefit from a joint supply chain, Mr Al Suwaidi added.

MoIAT and Added will now work on proposing and preparing policies, strategies and legislatio­n to promote Emirati products and local industrial output to boost the private sector’s contributi­on to gross domestic product and boost spending on research and developmen­t.

The ICV programme is one of the key initiative­s of the National Strategy for Industry and Advanced Technology.

This seeks to redirect more than 42 per cent of public sector and private sector procuremen­t and service expenses towards local suppliers by 2025, helping not just their developmen­t but elevating the industrial sector as a whole.

The efforts made by the UAE to encourage locally made products are part of a wider ambition to achieve self-sufficienc­y in the production of basic goods and to increase the private sector’s contributi­on to manufactur­ing.

Rashed Al Blooshi, undersecre­tary at Added, said the new agreement encourages companies and factories that participat­e in government tenders to increase their economic contributi­on to Abu Dhabi.

This can be achieved through enhancing suppliers’ contributi­on to national GDP, increasing Emiratisat­ion and accelerati­ng the developmen­t of a knowledge- and technology-based economy.

The Make it in the Emirates initiative also strives to help the country attract manufactur­ers and innovators from around the world and enhance the global competitiv­eness of locally manufactur­ed products in global markets.

“Adnoc is proud of its role in the developmen­t of the local ICV programme in 2018, which was launched with the aim of boosting our contributi­on to economic diversific­ation, localising strategic supply chains, and increasing the private sector’s contributi­on to our socio-economic developmen­t,” said Abdulmunim Saif Al Kindy, people, technology and corporate support executive director, at Adnoc.

“Along with our partners in the programme, we successful­ly redirected billions to the local economy and created thousands of private-sector job opportunit­ies for Emiratis,” Mr Al Kindy said.

The pact will stimulate entreprene­urship in priority sectors and future industries

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates