UAE Targets Advanced Technology Exports Worth $4b Annually

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum announcing the national program to accelerate the pace of technological transformation on Wednesday in Abu Dhabi (WAM)
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum announcing the national program to accelerate the pace of technological transformation on Wednesday in Abu Dhabi (WAM)
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UAE Targets Advanced Technology Exports Worth $4b Annually

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum announcing the national program to accelerate the pace of technological transformation on Wednesday in Abu Dhabi (WAM)
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum announcing the national program to accelerate the pace of technological transformation on Wednesday in Abu Dhabi (WAM)

The UAE launched on Wednesday the national program to accelerate the pace of technological transformation in priority sectors.

This comes as part of the national strategy for industry and advanced technology, which seeks to enhance the sector’s global competitiveness and sustainability, accelerate the pace of technology in the sector, enable the national capacities, and empower technology entrepreneurs and technology emerging companies in the digital transformation journey.

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE, and Ruler of Dubai, said: "We have launched a national program to accelerate the pace of technological transformation in the industrial and production sectors.”

“The program aims to develop 1,000 technology projects, and includes the establishment of national centers for industrial empowerment and aims to export advanced Emirati technological products at a value of 15 billion dirhams ($4 billion) annually,” he said.

"The employment of advanced technology in industries and projects is an essential pillar for developing our national economy in partnership with the private sector. The UAE represents a global center in the fields of research, development and innovation in future technology," Sheikh Mohammed affirmed.

"Through advanced technology, we see opportunities to achieve our national priorities and ambitions for the next fifty years. The program will make it possible for technology developers, entrepreneurs and emerging technology companies to experiment with technology in the UAE and launch from it for global transformational projects with a tangible impact," he added.

The program was launched during a special event in the capital Abu Dhabi.

The program is tailored to achieve a set of goals, primarily raising industrial sector’s contribution to the gross domestic product by 110 billion dirhams ($30 billion), enabling 15 billion dirhams ($4 billion) worth of advanced technology exports annually, investing 11 billion dirhams ($2.9 billion) in advanced technology, achieving 15 billion dirhams ($4 billion) annually of industrial productivity, in addition to nurturing Emirati talent across advanced technology projects within 10 years.

This program aims to launch 1,000 technological projects in several key productive sectors at the state level until 2031, in line with the national priorities of the UAE.

Some of these priorities are: building a flexible and competitive national economy based on knowledge and innovation, achieving sustainable development goals and climate neutrality, attaining self-sufficiency, raising productivity level in the national economy, enhancing the quality of life, and reinforcing the UAE’s status as a global hub for sciences and technology.

The program will be set in motion through the launch of five initiatives.



World Bank to Finance Syria with $146 Million to Restore Electricity

Syrians walk in a dark street in Douma. Reuters file photo
Syrians walk in a dark street in Douma. Reuters file photo
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World Bank to Finance Syria with $146 Million to Restore Electricity

Syrians walk in a dark street in Douma. Reuters file photo
Syrians walk in a dark street in Douma. Reuters file photo

The World Bank approved a $146 million grant to help Syria restore reliable, affordable electricity and support the country's economic recovery, it said in a statement on Wednesday.

“The Syria Electricity Emergency Project (SEEP) will rehabilitate damaged transmission lines and transformer substations and provide technical assistance to support the development of the electricity sector and build the capacity of its institutions,” it said.

After 14 years of war, Syria's electricity sector has been suffering from severe damage to its grid and power stations, aging infrastructure, and persistent fuel shortages.

"Among Syria’s urgent reconstruction needs, rehabilitating the electricity sector has emerged as a critical, no-regret investment that can improve the living conditions of the Syrian people, support the return of refugees and the internally displaced, enable resumption of other services such as water services and healthcare for the population and help kickstart economic recovery," said World Bank Middle East Division Director Jean-Christophe Carret.

"This project represents the first step in a planned increase in World Bank support to Syria on its path to recovery and development,” he added.

According to the World Bank statement, the SEEP will finance the rehabilitation of high voltage transmission lines, including two critical 400 kV high-voltage interconnector transmission lines damaged during the conflict, restoring Syria’s regional connectivity to Jordan and Türkiye.

The project will also repair damaged high-voltage transformer substations near demand centers in the most impacted areas that host the highest number of returnee refugees and internally displaced people and provide necessary spare parts and maintenance equipment.

In addition, the SEEP will provide technical assistance to inform the country’s key electricity sector strategies, policy and regulatory reforms, and investment plans for medium to long term sustainability. It will also provide capacity building support to the electricity sector institutions to implement these strategies and reforms.