The National - News

First phase of Dubai’s Dh3.2bn CommerCity free zone project launched

- MICHAEL FAHY

The first phase of Dubai CommerCity, a Dh3.2 billion e-commerce free zone, was launched by the Dubai Airport Freezone Authority.

Phase one will contain a floor area of 43,664 square metres out of a total of 195,096 square metres being built at the project in the Umm Ramool area of the city, close to Dubai Internatio­nal Airport.

“The launch of Dubai CommerCity aims to lead the future of e-commerce business in the region. The project has been thoroughly studied not only to provide foundation­al solutions, but also to stimulate and support business and prosperity at a time when the sector is going through peak growth,” said Dafza chairman Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed on Sunday.

“The e-commerce sector is key as its value is expected to reach $148.5 billion by 2022 in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia regions.”

Dubai first announced plans for CommerCity to be the first dedicated e-commerce free zone in the wider Mena and South Asia regions in 2017.

The first phase will contain a “business cluster” with more than 29,728 square metres in office space and 13,470 square metres of logistics unit and “multi-client warehouse” space.

These will be housed in a logistics cluster managed by Hellmann Worldwide Logistics and DHL. More than 51 per cent of the warehouse space has already been leased.

The GCC is the fastest-growing region for e-commerce and the UAE is the second-fastest market within it, with an expected compound annual growth rate of 38.3 per cent, Sheikh Ahmed said, without giving a time period.

“The launch of the new Dubai CommerCity facilities comes in line within the planned schedule,” said Dafza director general Mohammed Al Zarooni.

“Despite the global circumstan­ces and the challenges posed by the Covid-19 pandemic, we have witnessed an urgent need to build a worldclass e-commerce platform. It is set to attract specialise­d companies aiming to establish their regional headquarte­rs in the emirate of Dubai, which helps them expand and develop their regional operations to be able to keep pace with the significan­t growth in e-commerce,” he said.

As well as the contracts signed with Hellman and DHL to manage the logistics cluster, Dubai CommerCity has signed partnershi­ps with e-commerce software provider Magento Commerce and consultanc­y Redbox Digital to offer an “e-commerce as a service” package to online retailers, it said.

Storage built at the site will be offered under a “pay as you go” model to allow companies to scale their operations in line with demand, Dafza said.

The value of the e-commerce sector in the Mena region grew to $22bn last year, up from $4.2bn in 2015, according to a white paper published last week by Dubai-based venture capital company Wamda and the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology’s Legatum Centre for Developmen­t and Entreprene­urship.

“The bulk of growth in the sector was driven by the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt, which together account for 80 per cent of the region’s overall e-commerce market,” it said.

 ?? Dafza ?? A computer-generated image of Dubai CommerCity, a dedicated e-commerce free zone in the Mena and South Asia regions
Dafza A computer-generated image of Dubai CommerCity, a dedicated e-commerce free zone in the Mena and South Asia regions

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