The National - News

SHEIKH MOHAMED’S LEAD ROLE IN STEERING ECONOMIC GROWTH AND NAVIGATING THE ENERGY TRANSITION

▶ The UAE President is leading efforts to develop non-oil industries such as manufactur­ing, renewables, technology, banking and trade

- DEEPTHI NAIR

“In 50 years, when we might have the last barrel of oil, the question is: when it is shipped abroad, will we be sad?” Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed, who is the new President of the UAE, asked in 2015.

“If we are investing today in the right sectors, I can tell you we will celebrate at that moment.”

His message seven years ago at the World Government Summit in Dubai suggested he knew that the UAE’s continued prosperity would depend on a well-diversifie­d economy.

He has since steered the UAE towards investment in the developmen­t of its non-oil economy, to prepare the country for a post-oil era, and is leading efforts to funnel oil wealth into sectors such as technology and manufactur­ing.

Abu Dhabi’s non-oil foreign trade rose by 15 per cent in one year to more than Dh61.5 billion ($16.7bn) in the first quarter of 2022.

In March, Dr Thani Al Zeyoudi, Minister of State for Foreign Trade, said the country’s nonoil trade had come to a total of Dh16.1 trillion in the past 10 years as it sped up work to cut its reliance on hydrocarbo­ns.

In 2018, Sheikh Mohamed announced a Dh50bn stimulus package for Abu Dhabi.

It aimed to expand the nonoil economy, attracting and supporting start-ups and small businesses, and spurring innovation through research and developmen­t.

The Ghadan 21 initiative, which had the overarchin­g goal of reducing reliance on fossil fuels, stressed the importance of supporting the developmen­t of the local economy and creating jobs in Abu Dhabi.

The Abu Dhabi Accelerato­rs and Advanced Industries Council, called Ghadan, helps to attract and support technology and investment both locally and in the region.

The UAE, which has the world’s sixth-largest oil and gas reserves, has also invested in other sources of energy, building the nuclear plant at Al Barakah and developing hydrogen as a fuel.

The country has launched a net-zero by 2050 strategy with new investment­s worth Dh600bn planned in clean and renewable energy sources over the next three decades. By the middle of the century, it aims to double the contributi­on of clean energy to its power mix to 50 per cent. The country’s economy is also evolving, with artificial intelligen­ce and other technology being used to reduce its reliance on oil exports.

As the UAE also develops into a knowledge-based economy, the government is placing a greater emphasis on careers focused on science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s, which are known as the Stem subjects.

The government, as well as entities such as Mubadala Investment Company, have continued to encourage Emiratis to pursue careers in Stem subjects, which are the building blocks for economic diversific­ation.

Mubadala, in partnershi­p with Abu Dhabi Education Council, has awarded scholarshi­ps to support Emirati students’ pursuit of undergradu­ate degrees in Stem subjects. Working with Adec, the company also helped to steer the government school curriculum in this direction and to deliver Stem-related after-school programmes.

The UAE, the Arab world’s second-largest economy, plans to increase the contributi­on of the industrial sector to its gross domestic product in the next 10 years to create jobs and attract investment.

Last year, it announced Operation 300bn, which aims to more than double the contributi­on of the industrial sector to economic output to Dh300bn by 2031, from Dh133bn in March 2021. It also seeks to support 13,500 small and medium enterprise­s over the next decade.

This helped the country’s industrial exports to record a “historic rise” to about Dh120bn last year, as 220 factories opened in the Emirates, the Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology said.

The UAE also launched an in-country value programme as part of its Projects of the 50 initiative, which aims to boost the country’s industrial sector.

The ICV programme is aimed at boosting the growth of UAEbased industries by redirectin­g 50 per cent of government spending on procuremen­ts and tender contracts into the national economy by 2031. It was designed to stimulate demand for local products and services, and to encourage local manufactur­ers to diversify and attract foreign direct investment, with the aim of boosting economic growth and supporting local industries by redirectin­g higher portions of public spending into the national economy.

The national ICV programme has circulated Dh41bn back into the local market, promoting local companies, said Dr Sultan Al Jaber, Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology, and managing director and group chief executive of Adnoc. About 45 public entities and 13 major national institutio­ns and companies have joined the initiative.

The Fourth Industrial Revolution Programme was also launched last year. Known as UAE Industry 4.0, this initiative is designed to help manufactur­ers to adopt digital technology such as artificial intelligen­ce, sensors, robotics and the Internet of Things.

Emirates Global Aluminium is the UAE’s biggest industry conglomera­te outside oil and gas. One of the world’s largest aluminium producers, EGA is owned equally by Mubadala Investment Company and Investment Corporatio­n of Dubai.

The Emirates is also forging Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p Agreements with many countries to boost trade and diversify its economy.

This year, the UAE signed a deal with India. The agreement, which took effect on May 1, is expected to boost nonoil trade between the nations to $100bn in five years from $60bn now. A similar deal with Indonesia is expected to triple two-way trade in the next four years from $2.5bn in 2020.

An agreement with South Korea, which is expected to be finalised by the end of 2022, aims to enhance the economic partnershi­p between the countries to a minimum of $20bn in the next three to five years.

The UAE has also launched trade negotiatio­ns with partners including Turkey, Israel, Georgia and the Philippine­s, among others.

It plans to sign 27 deals in total as it looks to boost trade and foreign direct investment, Abdulla bin Touq, Minister of Economy, has said.

Non-oil trade totalled Dh16.1 trillion in the past 10 years as the UAE sped up work to reduce its reliance on hydrocarbo­ns

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 ?? Photo: EGA ?? Emirates Global Aluminium is the UAE’s biggest industry conglomera­te outside oil and gas
Photo: EGA Emirates Global Aluminium is the UAE’s biggest industry conglomera­te outside oil and gas
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 ?? ?? Above, Sheikh Mohamed attends the launch of the Net Zero 2050 Strategic Initiative, at Expo 2020 Dubai, in October last year, accompanie­d by Sheikh Maktoum bin Mohammed, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, Mariam Al Mheiri, Minister of Climate Change and Environmen­t and Suhail Al Mazrouei, Minister of Energy and Infrastruc­ture; Left, the Panorama Command Centre and Artificial Intelligen­ce space at the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company headquarte­rs
Above, Sheikh Mohamed attends the launch of the Net Zero 2050 Strategic Initiative, at Expo 2020 Dubai, in October last year, accompanie­d by Sheikh Maktoum bin Mohammed, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, Mariam Al Mheiri, Minister of Climate Change and Environmen­t and Suhail Al Mazrouei, Minister of Energy and Infrastruc­ture; Left, the Panorama Command Centre and Artificial Intelligen­ce space at the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company headquarte­rs

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