Tag Archives: development
The bond of UK-UAE friendship
The bond of UK-UAE friendship Amanda Fisher / 24 June 2013 Amanda Fisher speaks with British Ambassador Dominic Jermey about the challenges of office, Shaikh Khalifa’s State visit to Britain and camel racing. What is your background? I used to be an investment banker and I graduated from Cambridge with a literature and philosophy degree. Between high school and university, I taught in a school in Chile and I asked the Rothschild family for sponsorship money to get there. After university, I wrote to them and said thanks for the sponsorship money, how about a job? After working in investment banking in several countries, I returned to the UK, where I learnt Urdu through the Foreign Office, which is how I got into the diplomatic service. I think now the Foreign Office is very keen to reach out to the private sector … somebody like me who’s been an ambassador they’d be very open to me going to work for five years for a major multinational and then returning. Diplomacy in Britain is a career, but it’s no longer a hermetically sealed one. In which other countries and in what capacity have you previously worked? After learning Urdu, I went to work in Pakistan for the Foreign Office, which I thoroughly enjoyed, before I moved on to Afghanistan where we were working with the Northern Alliance and the Taleban. We were very much focusing on supporting the UN-led peace initiatives in the 90s and supporting the United Nations anti-drug campaign. We had a very strong interest as at that time about 90 per cent of the heroin on British streets was from Afghanistan. In 1999, I relocated to the Balkans during the Kosovo crisis, then I moved to East Timor the next year while there was intervention on the genocide happening there. I returned to the United Kingdom working in peace-keeping, before I took up a post as the deputy ambassador in Spain in 2004, returning to the United Kingdom in 2007 to take a position as the managing director of UK Trade and Investment. How long have you been in the UAE? I have been in Abu Dhabi since 2010. Are you here with your family? If so, tell us about them. I don’t actually talk much about my family as I don’t think it is for public consumption, but it’s safe to say they have fun here, they really enjoy camel festivals, water sports, and being welcomed by Emiratis into their homes. I have a wife, who is a doctor, and two children who I think are much more likely to follow their mother into becoming a doctor rather than diplomacy. Living in different countries around the world is a fantastic way to grow up. What do you think are the successes of the UAE in its relationship with the UK? A matter of weeks after I got here, Prime Minister David Cameron came on his first trip in office. He set out a vision to sort of re-energise the relationship between the UK and the UAE and I’m very much the custodian of that relationship. It spreads across our people, 120,000 British nationals live in this country and choose to be here because they enjoy it and want to contribute to the development of this country. The royal families have close relations, and I saw that last month when the Queen invited the President, His Highness Shaikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan and his brothers into her home. It was one of the first state trips that Shaikh Khalifa had done in a number of years and I think it’s a record actually that the Queen has done a visit to a country and in less than three years there’s been a return back, which speaks about the closeness of the relationship. There’s a very close political relationship, and we see that right now with the two countries cooperating on issues like Syria, which is one of the biggest challenges facing the world. We’ve also had a close military relationship for example in places like Afghanistan, where our servicemen serve alongside each other in harm’s way. And there’s a very close business relationship as well. At a recent Manchester City football match, I looked at the work done in the area by the UAE-UK Business Council, who have turned the area around the stadium into a business park, following on from Shaikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Presidential Affair’s, investments in Manchester City. While there are 5,000 British businesses operating in the UAE, I see business very much as a two-way street, with some outstanding UAE businesses operating in the UK. There is the London Gateway Business Port being built by DP World, which is a multi-billion dollar investment, we see The Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (TAQA) investing in the North Sea, and we see Masdar developing the London Array, which will be Northern Europe’s largest offshore wind farm. There’s a growing presence of Emirati businesses and investment in the UK. What do you think are the challenges faced by the UAE? I think this is a difficult neighbourhood, we’ve seen the economic benefit to the UAE from the Arab Spring in terms of migration of investment, but nevertheless, the old uncertainties of the stability of the Middle East have surfaced. As I look at what’s going on in Syria right now and the wider impact in terms of humanitarian issues and strong Islamist groups from around the region taking part in the fighting, I think that’s a grave concern for us and that’s a concern the Emiratis share. I look across the water to Iran and the nuclear programme, and I look at the UAE which is creating a gold standard civil nuclear programme completely aligned with the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) and we compare that to the approach that Iran is taking from where they are making uranium enriched to a level that has no civil use, that of course is of grave concern. These are important issues that the UK will continue to discuss with the UAE government. What are your priorities in your role? My role is to make sure that all the many different parts of the bilateral relationship join up well and have real impact as more than the sum of the parts. It’s about making sure the relationships work in terms of foreign policy and business. I ensure when Shaikh Khalifa or His Highness Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, visit Britain they meet the people they need to meet and vice-versa. There were 33 members of the royal family or Ministers from the UK who came to the UAE last year — part of my job is making sure those people meet the right people when they are here and that those meetings drive forward business in a way that is good for the UK and the UAE. It’s about something that works for the long term. What is the stance on visa requirements for Emiratis? There has been a lot of talk the UK will remove restrictions, allowing them to enter the country without a pre-approved visa. This is a really important issue for the Emiratis and I think the UAE Minister of Foreign Affairs, Shaikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, is playing a blinder in terms of getting progress, and we’re working on it. I think they’re putting forward a really excellent case, not just in the UK, but in many countries. I can’t say when there will be any progress, but we’re working on it. Do you think the two countries will continue their historical closeness? I think it’s a relationship that will last long into the future, it’s got very strong roots, and importantly there are lots of people — Emiratis and Brits — who are working hard to develop what we do together, whether it’s military cooperation, trade cooperation or ties between the royal families. I think from these roots a really strong and healthy relationship will continue to grow. What is your favourite pastime in the UAE? I enjoy going to camel races, it’s great fun and it’s absolutely wild, actually. We kind of hurtle along in our 4 X 4, shouting at our camel while standing in the sun roof. I’ve also been skydiving with the British Army’s elite parachute regiment, The Red Devils, over Palm Jumeirah. That was a once in a lifetime experience, and I haven’t felt the need to go skydiving since. Where is your favourite destination in the UAE? I love Dubai, but I love Al Ain probably most of all. That’s where I go to relax. We have a house by the Oasis and I just love wandering through and reflecting on the way things used to be in the UK. amanda@khaleejtimes.com —Interview in abridged format Continue reading
GCC Investors Eye African Farmland
22 April 2013, 9:26 GMT | By Paul Melly Africa’s fertile soil can provide food security and investment opportunities In the capital-rich countries of the GCC, the chronic shortage of rainfall limits the prospects for food production. On the other hand, the African continent has vast agricultural potential but suffers from a shortage of investment. The complementarity of interests between the Gulf and its economic partners south of the Sahara seems clear, and has been recognised since the late 1990s as governments on both sides explore the scope for deals that could make African land available to Arab investors. However, translating this vision into a mutually beneficial reality has proved a complex challenge. For GCC states, the key concern has been to ensure security of food supply. Populations in the GCC states are growing fast and traditional local oasis agriculture cannot satisfy the consumption demands of booming societies in the modern era. GCC constraints To mitigate the problem, Gulf governments have encouraged domestic irrigated production. But the potential for this practice is limited by environmental and financial constraints. Natural aquifers in the region are becoming depleted, while using desalinated water is hugely expensive. The method might be viable for some high-value horticultural crops, but makes little sense for cereals. Saudi Arabia eventually concluded that the large-scale irrigated production of wheat was not a sensible use of limited and highly subsidised water supplies, and the practice is now being phased out. High oil prices have enabled GCC states to maintain security of food supply despite rising world prices. But most have felt uncomfortable relying so heavily on the open world market. Over the past 15 years they have explored the scope to invest in land in other regions that have more reliable agricultural potential. But it has not always been possible to buy or lease land in countries that are major global grain exporters; big rice producers such as Thailand, for example, impose tight restrictions. This has led GCC governments to look to Africa, where fertile land and rainfall are in more ample supply than on the Arabian peninsula. Since the 1990s, there has been a steady trickle of announcements about major investments in the continent’s land, often from Saudi Arabia. In 2009, the Jenat consortium of Saudi agricultural firms announced plans for a $40m investment in food production in Sudan and Ethiopia, while another Saudi group, Hadco, is reported to have acquired 25,000 hectares of Sudanese cropland. Last year, Sheikh Mohammed al-Amoudi’s Saudi Star group launched a programme to develop 500,000 hectares of land in Ethiopia, and a small area of this is already in production. Governments have also been important actors in this process. Qatar agreed a deal to take over large tracts of the Tana River delta in Kenya, in return for building a new port at Lamu. The Abu Dhabi Fund for Development is said to be funding a 28,000-hectare project in Sudan to grow alfalfa, maize, beans and potatoes for export to the UAE. Riyadh leads Once again it is Saudi Arabia that has led the field, with government support for agricultural partnerships with Africa, notably through the state’s King Abdullah Initiative for Saudi Agricultural Investment Abroad (KAISAIA). In 2012, the kingdom’s Agriculture Minister, Fahd Balghunaim, announced that the task of agricultural investment abroad would be transferred to a KAISAIA offshoot, the Saudi Company for Agricultural Investment and Animal Production (SCAIAP). The firm has capital of SR3bn ($800m), although it is not thought to have disbursed funds yet. Many of the announced GCC agricultural investments have never been implemented, or even started, on the ground in Africa, says Eckhart Woertz, author of Oil for Food: The Global Food Crisis and the Middle East, a new book examining these issues. “There is a huge discrepancy between amounts projected and amounts actually implemented,” he says. Moreover, he points out that concrete schemes have been confined to a relatively small number of countries. “Sudan is certainly top of the list, followed by Ethiopia, Tanzania, West Africa, Senegal and Mali,” he says. “Sudan is the most popular country for announcements, but most of the projects have either not started or, if they have started, are at a very early stage of implementation.” There are several reasons for the gap between ambition and reality. Other than livestock from the Horn of Africa, GCC countries have little track record of importing food from the continent. The GCC’s plans to invest in sub-Saharan agriculture as a source of food crops for home markets have been hindered by the fact that many of the targeted African countries have a tropical climate that is not well suited to the cultivation of some of the products most heavily consumed in the Arab world, such as wheat and barley. These temperate-climate cereals are mainly imported from Canada, the US, Australia, Russia, Ukraine and EU states such as France. Rice is widely grown in Africa and is a crop that is also heavily consumed in the GCC. At present, most Gulf imports of basmati rice come from Pakistan and India, although Arab investors have now developed some pilot projects in Senegal and Mali for export to the Gulf. Local challenges A further major hurdle is that local social and political conditions are not always welcoming. Land-lease agreements between Gulf investors or governments and central governments in sub-Saharan Africa are often seen as attempted land grabs by wealthy outsiders. These deals can be hugely controversial in countries that are poor and where much of the indigenous local population is undernourished. They can spark protests among local populations, local and international media, and non-governmental organisations. Woertz cites the example of Qatar’s agreement with Kenya to take over land in the Tana River valley. “The locals started complaining; there was a lot of resistance by land groups,” he says. “Originally, the scheme was tied to the construction of a port at Lamu, but now the Chinese have got the contract to build the port.” Land deals with Gulf investors – and other outsiders, including the Koreans – have provoked fears that existing local users such as pastoralists or smallholders will be pushed out to make way for big, foreign commercial investors. Still, Woertz says Arab investors have become more sensitive to these issues. “There is a certain readiness to take these things into consideration,” he says. “So, perhaps you may see other types of projects taking place: to share equity or have outgrower schemes.” Gulf governments and investors have held talks with the UN’s Food & Agriculture Organisation (FAO), which could act as an honest broker in identifying opportunities for agricultural partnerships between the GCC and Africa that would respect the interests of communities on both sides. But the realisation of such an approach presents complex challenges. Woertz points out that Saudi Arabia’s strategic goal remains the production of food for its domestic consumption. Indeed, those Saudi agricultural firms that have been looking at investment in Africa expect to enjoy substantial subsidies from the kingdom’s authorities. This is because their role would be to produce food to replace the output of the domestic cereals programme that is now being wound up for environmental reasons. The cereals scheme was massively subsidised, says Woertz. “The direct costs of subsidies for the Saudi wheat program were $85bn between 1984 and 2000. This was equivalent to 18 per cent of Saudi Arabia’s $485bn in oil revenues during that period.” Rethinking strategy Another option is to treat African agriculture as essentially an investment; a business proposition focused on the world market rather than a means of satisfying Gulf demand for food imports. This is a strategy being pursued by Hassad Foods, an arm of Qatar Holding, which is part of the emirate’s sovereign wealth fund, Qatar Investment Authority. Hassad’s publicity material says: “While all investments are there to generate profits, they also exist to fulfil certain needs to support the food security programme when required.” But such an approach can pose tough challenges for GCC investors, who mostly lack experience in producing or marketing tropical cash crops and risk finding themselves in direct competition with long-established sub-Saharan and Western players. They will often need to recruit foreign sector specialists to actually establish and run the projects for them. Even so, some have taken on the challenge. In 2011, Saudi-based Menafea Holdings revealed plans to invest $125m in a new pineapple farm and processing plant in Zambia. The GCC is short on food, but rich in cash. African nations are fertile and need money. As ties between the Gulf and Africa strengthen, investment in agriculture is likely to grow. Continue reading
Another Port and Pellet Pact
Some big news in the pellet industry this week was that Enova Energy group signed a Letter of Intent with the St. Joe Company in Florida to use the port and the AN Railway to ship wood pellets overseas, a minimum of 1 million metric tons. As pointed out in the announcement from Enova, the Port of Port St. Joe (yes, it is the Port of Port St. Joe) is well positioned for bulk cargo shipments, offering access to rail, the U.S. Gulf Intracoastal Waterway and state and U.S. highways. The Port also has a navigational channel that is federally authorized to a maximum of 37 feet, but dredging the Port’s shipping channel to the authorized depth is necessary prior to commencing shipping activities. And it sounds like it’s definitely going to happen. As a footnote, Enova has a biomass power plant in development in Painfield, Conn., that will begin operations during the last quarter of this year. – See more at: http://www.biomassma…h.e0UG9DRQ.dpuf Continue reading