Times of Oman

Improved growth to revive UAE projects

Recovery in oil prices combined with growing public and private sector activity boosted by Dubai’s preparatio­ns for the Expo 2020 will see real GDP growth rise by 4-5% a year during 20172020 period

- Times News Service

MUSCAT: Project activity in the UAE is forecast to recover in 2017 after a difficult 2016 on the back of a strong recovery in economic growth, according to a new report from Middle East business intelligen­ce service MEED.

MEED’s annual ‘UAE Outlook’ report for 2016 said that a recovery in oil prices combined with growing public and private sector activity boosted by Dubai’s preparatio­ns for the Expo 2020 will see real GDP growth rise to between 4-5 per cent a year from 20172020, compared to about 3.1 per cent growth in 2016.

While acknowledg­ing that many uncertaint­ies remain that could derail an anticipate­d recovery in oil prices, the report says that a recovery in oil prices coupled with a modest increase in UAE oil production in 2017 will be supported by a recovery in non-oil activity connected with intensifyi­ng investment ahead of Expo 2020, and growing trade with Iran following the lifting of nuclearrel­ated internatio­nal sanctions.

Projects rebound

The recovery is expected to support an increase in major project spending in the emirates after a year of flat growth in 2016 stunted by cutbacks in government spending and a review of oil and gas and infrastruc­ture projects in Abu Dhabi.

The report says that about $155 billion worth of major projects were under execution in the UAE at the mid-point of 2016 and it identifies a project pipeline of about $629 billion worth of major projects that are planned in the UAE but not underway as of mid-2016.

About $22.6 billion worth of project contracts have been awarded in the UAE in the first half of 2016, largely driven by real estate, transport and power projects in Dubai, which account for about $16 billion worth of awards.

MEED forecasts that about $37 billion of awards will be made in the UAE in 2016, a similar level to 2015. From 2006-2015, the UAE awarded an estimated total of $507 billion worth of projects, representi­ng about 35 per cent of the total value of contract awards in the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council GCC in that period.

The largest sectors for future projects are constructi­on, followed by transport. In addition to Abu Dhabi’s metro and light rail plans, there is the expansion of Al Maktoum Internatio­nal airport and further phases of Etihad Rail’s federal railway to execute.

Fiscal pressure

The UAE, one of the world’s largest exporters of oil, is solvent and creditwort­hy with at least $500billion-worth of public and private savings.

Its economy is increasing­ly diversifie­d and supports large and experience­d corporatio­ns active in regional and global markets. The banking system is solvent, liquid and well-managed.

However, the report highlights the unpreceden­ted fiscal challenges facing the UAE as a result of the sharp and sustained fall in the oil price since the summer of 2014.

The UAE economy will contract significan­tly in current terms in line with the oil price in 2016. As a result of lower oil export revenues, the consolidat­ed UAE government will record a budget deficit and the UAE’s historical­ly substantia­l current account surplus will be eliminated.

 ?? Supplied picture ?? ON RECOVERY PATH: The recovery is expected to support an increase in major project spending in the emirates after a year of flat growth in 2016 stunted by cutbacks in government spending and a review of oil and gas and infrastruc­ture projects.–
Supplied picture ON RECOVERY PATH: The recovery is expected to support an increase in major project spending in the emirates after a year of flat growth in 2016 stunted by cutbacks in government spending and a review of oil and gas and infrastruc­ture projects.–

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman