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Saudi Aramco, GE to launch Kingdom’s first wind turbine

- ARAB NEWS Frank Kane

operations in 47 cities across the Middle East, North Africa, Turkey and Pakistan, STC said.

In July, Careem announced a new research and developmen­t (R&D) strategy and plans for global expansion.

Over the next five years, Careem will invest $100 million in research and developmen­t, which includes growing its team in the UAE and Pakistan, and opening new R&D centers in Egypt and Germany.

“Over the last few years, the region has witnessed a surge in technologi­cal innovation and has become home to rapidly growing technology startups,” said Magnus Olsson, co-founder and chief navigator, Careem.

“These startups are using technology to improve the lives of people in the region. Careem is committed to continue innovating to offer the region a safe and reliable transporta­tion option. In order to do that, we have to double-down on research and developmen­t,” he added.

STC is the largest Arab telecommun­ications firm in terms of capitaliza­tion. It has more than 100 million customers in nine countries including Turkey, South Africa, India and Malaysia. JEDDAH: Saudi Aramco plans to commission its wind turbine pilot project, the first in the Kingdom, next month, the state oil company said on Sunday, part of nationwide plans to diversify energy supplies and to meet an increase in demand.

The wind turbine, supplied by US company General Electric (GE) will provide power to Saudi Aramco’s bulk plant in Turaif, in northwest Saudi Arabia.

“The first electricit­y is expected to be supplied to the Saudi Aramco bulk plant once commission­ing of the wind turbine is completed in January 2017,” Aramco said in a

IF any further proof were needed that this is not 2009 all over again in the Gulf’s financial markets, it came in the regional reaction to last week’s hike in the US Federal Reserve’s basic interest rate and indication­s there could be further rate rises next year.

All the Gulf central banks immediatel­y followed the US example, as they are monetarily obliged to do under the dollar peg, and the likelihood is that the region can look forward to at least three, maybe four rises next year.

This is not especially good for the economies of the Gulf, buffeted by lower oil prices and revenues, fiscal constraint­s and the inflationa­ry pressures of a strong dollar. However, given the wider array of financial techniques available to region’s policymake­rs and the lessons learned in 2009, it need no longer turn a drama into a crisis.

Back at the height of what economists now acronymize to the GFC — global financial crisis — the Gulf banking system reacted violently to each twitch in the US financial system. The main worry for the region back then was not interest rates but liquidity: There was a distinct danger that Gulf banks would run out of dollars (and, by pegged extension, riyals, dirhams, dinars and the rest.)

Last week, when Fed Chairman Janet Yellen made her move, the region’s banking system took it in its stride. The key indicators of liquidity, interbank money rates, barely flickered. This is in contrast not just to 2009, but also to the mini-liquidity crisis the Gulf weathered in 2014-15, when collapsing oil prices again threatened to stop the ATMs working, and to the “taper tantrum” of last year when equity markets dived under threat of an end to the Fed’s quantitati­ve easing (QE) policy.

The reason for the market’s comparativ­ely benign response is two-fold: The oil price outlook is significan­tly better, and regional policymake­rs have developed a powerful new array of weapons to fight against economic shocks. In particular, the bond-raising exercises of virtually all Gulf states, but especially Saudi Arabia, have demonstrat­ed the financial resilience of the region.

This does not mean that rising interest rates will have no effect on the Gulf. Soon after the Fed hiked, I met with Chris Probyn, chief economist with State Street Global Advisers, the Boston-based investor with a gigantic $4.2 trillion worth of funds under management.

He was on the Middle East leg of the firm’s annual world tour, and had just come from statement. Saudi Arabia plans to generate 9.5 gigawatts of electricit­y from renewable energy.

Abdulkarim Al-Ghamdi, Saudi Aramco’s executive head for power systems said: “Saudi Aramco is actively promoting the reduction of energy intensity across the Kingdom by advocating responsibl­e policies, awareness, and energy innovation.”

The new wind turbine will generate 2.75 megawatts of power at its peak, enough to power around 250 Saudi households, the company said.

It will also reduce the burning of diesel for power generation by 18,600 barrels of oil equivalent per year (boepd). Riyadh, where he had been intensely interrogat­ed by Saudi investors about what the US rate rise meant for regional economies.

“I told them that this rise was not good for the Gulf. Their monetary authoritie­s would have to follow suit, which against the background of low oils prices, fiscal pressures and sluggish economies was a bad combinatio­n,” he said.

More expensive capital will do nothing to help the Gulf economies counter recessiona­ry pressures, which have seen the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) cut growth forecasts. It will make it more costly to raise debt on the internatio­nal markets. It will increase inflationa­ry pressures at home, and make it more difficult for Gulf exporters.

Because of a historic correlatio­n between the oil price and the strength of the dollar, it might weaken crude’s recovery.

Higher rates could also affect those parts of the region anticipati­ng imminent debt restructur­ings (such as Dubai), though because most are in dollars or dollar-pegged currencies, these higher costs should not be deal-breakers.

The Gulf, because of oil and the dollar peg, is not really to be counted among the emerging markets, even though some of its equity markets now have that ranking by MSCI. However, for the fast-growing economies of Asia and Africa, the rate rise is a mixed blessing. Their power to export in local currencies is enhanced by the rising dollar, but loans and debts will become more expensive to service. Asian markets took the rate rise news badly.

So Gulf markets came through a major test quite easily, but there are others ahead. The background to the Yelland rise is the looming presidency of Donald Trump. Thanks to the policies of outgoing President Barack Obama, Trump inherits an economy stronger than at any time since the GFC.

Employment is at near capacity, and GDP growth threatens to break through the 2 percent level that has been its ceiling since 2009. US markets have soared too on Trump’s promises of fiscal and infrastruc­ture stimulus. As ever, the US economy dominates the world, and the Gulf should benefit longterm from a booming America. But how long that lasts, and how the Gulf reacts if the “Trump boom” ever turns into the “Trump bust,” is a matter for another day. Frank Kane is an award-winning business journalist based in Dubai. He can be reached on Twitter @frankkaned­ubai

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 ??  ?? Dubai-based Careem, which began operations in July 2012, operates in 11 countries across the Middle East. (Reuters)
Dubai-based Careem, which began operations in July 2012, operates in 11 countries across the Middle East. (Reuters)
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