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The UAE signed a massive, $3.4 billion deal with China

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The UAE signed a massive, $3.4 billion deal with China — and that ‘isn’t a surprise’
PUBLISHED 3 HOURS AGO

Dan Murphy

  • The UAE and China signed $3.4 billion dollars worth of new deals on the weekend, as part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative.
  • The latest agreement is expected to boost an existing $53 billion dollars worth of bilateral trade to $70 billion next year.
  • China is already the UAE’s second largest trading partner, and the Emirates serve as a major gateway for Chinese exports to the Middle East.
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Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, vice president and prime minister of the United Arab Emirates, ruler of the Emirate of Dubai, China’s President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan (L-R) ahead of a reception marking the Belt and Road Forum at the National Museum of China on April 26, 2019 in Beijing.

A move by China and the United Arab Emirates to expand trade and investment ties through new deals worth $3.4 billion “isn’t a surprise,” according to World Economic Forum President Børge Brende.

“China is now the second largest economy in the world and Asia is now 50 percent of global GDP,” Brende told CNBC’s “Capital Connection” on Sunday. “A lot of countries like the UAE see huge market opportunities in China.”


The UAE and China signed $3.4 billion worth of new deals on the weekend, as part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative — a massive infrastructure project that involves building roads, railways and shipping lines between China and more than 60 countries in Asia, Europe, Middle East and North Africa. The latest agreement is expected to boost an existing $53 billion worth of bilateral trade to $70 billion next year.

Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, participated in the Belt and Road forum in Beijing on the weekend, where he met Chinese President Xi Jinping to ink the deals.

China is already the UAE’s second largest trading partner, and the UAE serves as a major gateway for Chinese exports to the Middle East.

We’re living in a very different world than we did ten years ago. It’s a multipolar, multi-conceptual world.
Børge Brende

As part of the new deals, the two countries launched a number of new investments including the development of a 60 million square feet station at the new Silk Road in Dubai for Expo 2020.



“Our Chinese partner will invest $2.4 billion in using the station to store and ship Chinese products from Jebel Ali to the world,” Sheikh Mohammed, who is also the ruler of Dubai, said in a tweet on Saturday.

Expanding influence
The UAE has emerged as a key player in Xi’s Belt and Road initiative, which is attempting to link China by both sea and land to markets in Asia and Europe through a range of strategic, and oftentimes controversial, investments.

The project has led some to suggest that China is using the initiative to expand its economic and geopolitical clout — but Beijing has always rejected those criticisms.

“We’re living in a very different world than we did ten years ago. It’s a multipolar, multi-conceptual world,” Brende said.

“Multipolar, in the sense that we see much more geopolitical competition. It’s also multi-conceptual, because there are different ideologies out there. It’s not only one that we are used to, with the U.S. and western Europe way of running things, ” he added.

“In such a world, what I think is important is that we can find common ground and collaborate on these issues and not just compete with each other.”

UAE will be ‘vital’
The UAE will be “a vital station along the new Silk Road,” Sheikh Mohammed tweeted on Friday, when he announced plans for a $1 billion “Vegetable Basket” project that will import, process, pack and export agricultural, marine and animal products through the new Silk Road. The project is supported by the China-Arab Investment Fund, he added.

“The Arab-Chinese collaboration will positively contribute to the Belt and Road Initiative, given the Arab world’s strategic location that connects East & West,” Sheikh Mohammed tweeted.


The UAE government has also partnered with the World Economic Forum to launch “The Centre for Fourth Industrial Revolution” in the Emirates, the first of its kind in the region and the fifth globally.

The term “fourth industrial revolution” is defined as a “technological revolution ... that is blurring the lines between the physical, digital and biological spheres.” It was a term first introduced by the founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum, Klaus Schwab.

The new initiative — a collaboration between the Dubai Future Foundation and the World Economic Forum — aims to develop mechanisms, applications and uses for the fourth industrial revolution in the UAE, according to a government statement.

“The fourth industrial revolution will shape the whole century,” Brende said. “Those nations that are on top of these new technologies, being artificial intelligence, internet of things, big data and autonomous vehicles, will come out of this century as the most prosperous ones.”

“I’m not surprised that the UAE and Dubai is in the forefront,” he added.

https://www.cnbc.com/2019/04/29/chi...t-and-road-isnt-a-surprise-wef-president.html
 
“The fourth industrial revolution will shape the whole century,” Brende said. “Those nations that are on top of these new technologies, being artificial intelligence, internet of things, big data and autonomous vehicles, will come out of this century as the most prosperous ones.”

“I’m not surprised that the UAE and Dubai is in the forefront,” he added.

https://www.cnbc.com/2019/04/29/chi...t-and-road-isnt-a-surprise-wef-president.html

I really like where UAE is heading. The first futuristic cities in the world by 2030 will be in UAE.

Sci-fi will be possible in UAE
 
Saudi Arabia participates in China Belt and Road forum

RIYADH: The Kingdom participated in a Belt and Road forum held in Beijing, the Saudi Press Agency reported, with officials from both sides discussing cooperation, experiences and shared interests in the fields of archaeology and transport.

The Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation is a chance for countries to pitch for investment in a massive infrastructure project aimed at connecting China with the rest of the world.

The Department of Antiquities and Museums at the Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage (SCTH) was part of the Kingdom’s delegation.

It reviewed the outcome of excavation work at the Sarin archaeological site south of Al-Lith through a workshop hosted by the China National Center of Underwater Cultural Heritage, with the participation of Abdullah Al-Zahrani, general director of archaeological researches and studies at SCTH.

Al-Zahrani highlighted the most prominent excavation works carried out in the past three years at the Sarin site, which houses ancient hills that are completely covered by sand and buildings. “Parts of pots made of different materials in various shapes are scattered on those hills, in addition to metal pieces, mainly coins and jewelry.”
Jiang Bong, head of the Chinese expedition team, talked about the most important findings of the excavation works.

“We have found pieces of broken Chinese porcelain that date back to different eras, which indicates that the site is an important commercial site on the Maritime Silk Road and confirms that ancient China had close maritime communication with the Arabian Peninsula and the Red Sea,” he said at the workshop.

President of the China National Center of Underwater Cultural Heritage, Waing Daimen, said that the Saudi-Chinese expedition had contributed to an exchange between the two countries in the field of archaeological excavation. He described the Sarin project as one of the most important international cooperative research projects carried out by China.

The workshop also touched on the most important Arab sources documenting the arrival of Chinese trade and pilgrimage ships to Arab ports on the Arabian Gulf and the Red Sea.

Another part of the Saudi delegation at the forum represented the Kingdom’s transport and logistics interests.
Nabeel Al-Amoudi, the Saudi minister of transport, visited the Port of Shanghai along with the chairman of the Public Transport Authority, Dr. Rumaih Al-Rumaih.

Al-Amoudi examined the latest container-handling technologies and discussed the possibility of transferring these operational experiences to Saudi ports, which could promote the Kingdom’s shipping industry.
Al-Amoudi stressed Saudi Arabia’s desire to promote cooperation with China.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1489431/saudi-arabia
 

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