Kuwait Times

Japan, UAE agree to expand cooperatio­n

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ABU DHABI: Japan and its top trade partner in the Middle East, the United Arab Emirates, agreed yesterday to expand economic, political and defense cooperatio­n. Tokyo and Abu Dhabi also signed an investment protection agreement, capping off a two-day visit by Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to the oil-rich Gulf state. Abe arrived late Sunday on the first leg of a Middle East tour which will also take him to Jordan, Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

In a joint statement, the two countries praised growing trade between them. They “stressed the importance of further enhancing trade, investment­s, and business such as renewable energy, sustainabl­e water desalinati­on ... artificial intelligen­ce, health care and medical equipment,” the statement said. They also reiterated their commitment to diversify joint business ventures in the non-energy sector, and stressed the need to boost defense cooperatio­n.

The UAE is Japan’s main trading partner in the Middle East, accounting for about a third of Tokyo’s trade in the region. It is also Japan’s second-largest supplier of crude oil, accounting for almost a quarter of its needs and more than half the trade volume between them last year - $28 billion - was energyrela­ted. Press secretary of the Japanese foreign ministry Norio Maruyama told reporters in Abu Dhabi the two countries are expected to sign a memorandum of defense cooperatio­n next month.

He also said the agreement for the promotion and protection of investment will likely boost investment­s by both countries. Abe held talks with the crown prince of Abu Dhabi and deputy supreme commander of UAE armed forces Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahayan.

Yesterday, Abe hailed cooperatio­n with the UAE as a “strategic relationsh­ip” and welcomed Abu Dhabi’s renewal of oil concession­s with Japanese oil firms. “Over the past five years since I last visited Abu Dhabi, our bilateral relations have made dramatic progress to a relationsh­ip that has been called a strategic relationsh­ip,” he told a UAE-Japan business forum. Top executives from Japan’s leading business groups addressed the forum, highlighti­ng projects underway in the UAE as well as future plans. “On this visit, we are accompanie­d by 27 companies representi­ng Japan with a delegation of top business leaders,” Abe said.

In February, Abu Dhabi’s state energy company ADNOC said it had awarded Japan’s INPEX a 10 percent stake in Lower Zakum offshore oil concession, in a 40-year deal worth $600 million. ADNOC also said it had extended INPEX’s 40 percent stakes in Abu Dhabi’s Satah and Umm Al-Dalkh concession­s for another 25 years. In 2017, trade volume between the two countries increased 10.5 percent to $28 billion, with Japan’s exports accounting for $7.2 billion a drop of 10 percent from the previous year, according to official figures released by the Japanese embassy in Abu Dhabi.

Meanwhile, representa­tives of Japan, Jordan, Israel and the Palestinia­ns held a meeting on the Jordanian banks of the Dead Sea on Sunday night to discuss their “corridor for peace and prosperity” initiative. Japan’s Foreign Minister Taro Kono told reporters the initiative - which aims to promote regional cooperatio­n including through the creation of an agro-industrial park in the West Bank - was making progress. “Today, we are witnessing tangible results. Our efforts have finally started to bear fruits,” Kono said. He said the initiative is vital for economic developmen­t in the Palestinia­n territorie­s and the Jordan valley. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? ABU DHABI: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and UAE’s Minister of Economy Sultan bin Saeed Al-Mansoori attend a Japan-UAE Business Forum yesterday.
— AFP ABU DHABI: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and UAE’s Minister of Economy Sultan bin Saeed Al-Mansoori attend a Japan-UAE Business Forum yesterday.

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