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Economics & Policy

Mobile phone prices across the Arab world

by Benjamin Redd January 24, 2013
written by Benjamin Redd

The Lebanese are used to complaining about the price of their phonecalls, but are they really so much worse off than the rest of the region?

Executive mapped the price of a phonecall and a text across the Arab world and found some surprising results. Click here or on the map below to go straight to the interactive data.

 

January 24, 2013 0 comments
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The Buzz

Morning briefing: 23 Jan 2013

by Executive Staff January 23, 2013
written by Executive Staff

Gold held near a one-month high on Wednesday but faces a strong resistance at US$1,700 an ounce, as it struggles to attract fresh buying from investors who opted for riskier assets against the backdrop of a global economic recovery.

More from Reuters

 

Brent crude held above $112 a barrel on Wednesday, supported by a brighter outlook for the global economy while investors awaited inventory data from the United States for clues about demand in the world's largest oil consumer.

More from Reuters

 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has pledged to form "start anew," after his alliance won a narrow election victory.

More from the BBC

 

Egypt recorded a 17 percent rise in tourists in 2012 and a 13 percent increase in income generated, the tourism minister said on Tuesday, indicating a steady recovery in the vital industry.

More from Reuters

 

Dubai used its first big debt sale of 2013 on Tuesday to show the world the glitzy desert city-state had well recovered from its credit crisis of four years ago, as investors scrambled to get a piece of the $1.25 billion deal.

More from Reuters

 

Lebanon’s Telecoms Minister Nicolas Sehnaoui has shrugged off allegations made by Future Movement MP Ghazi Youssef that he had embezzled government funds.

More from The Daily Star

 

Companies

The first phase of Doha’s new Hamad International Airport will open on April 1, initially accommodating 12 passenger airlines and low-cost airlines.

More from Gulf Business

 

Bahrain Telecommunications Co reported a 10th profit drop in 11 quarters on Tuesday as domestic competition and one-off charges from a cost-cutting program hurt the bottom line.

More from Reuters

 

The Beirut-based car company W Motors has completed the first prototype of its $3.4 million “ultra-luxury hypercar” and is gearing up to officially launch sales at the Qatar Auto show on Jan. 29.

More from The Daily Star

 

Lebanese nuts maker Al Rifai has ceased its cooperation with Kuwaiti partner Saleh Al Homaizi.

More from Lebanon Business News

January 23, 2013 0 comments
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The Buzz

Morning briefing: 22 Jan 2013

by Executive Staff January 22, 2013
written by Executive Staff

Economics

Brent crude edged up near US$112 a barrel on Tuesday as Japan was expected to pump in more money to boost its economy, adding to positive growth signals from the United States and China in past weeks.

More from Reuters

 

Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest crude exporter, said it cut production last month to adjust to decreased demand rather than to prop up oil prices.

More from Bloomberg

 

Gulf Arab countries have promised Yemen further aid on top of the $7.9 billion pledged by foreign donors last autumn, but an amount has yet to be specified, a Yemeni government minister said Monday.

More from Reuters

 

The Lebanese government’s 50-day plan to encourage tourism with discounts appears to be struggling after two weeks, with many hotels still empty.

More from The Daily Star

 

Rents in Dubai rose 16 percent in 2012 as confidence returned to the emirate's property market.

More from The National

 

Saudi Arabia has called for a minimum 50 percent increase in the capital of the Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development, a leading Arab soft-loan development institution, and urged more commerce between Arab countries.

More from Reuters

 

Companies

German luxury car maker Audi plans to double its Middle East sales to at least 20,000 vehicles a year by 2020, helped by investment in showrooms and service centres, its local chief said.

More from Gulf Business

 

The US$13 billion merger of Abu Dhabi's largest developers could free up stalled projects in the city as the new merged entity rethinks its strategy.

More from The National

 

Shares in Abu Dhabi's Aldar Properties drop 6.1 percent to a two-week low, extending losses since announcing an all-share merger with Sorouh Real Estate.

More from Arabian Business

 

Tamweel, the Dubai-based Islamic mortgage lender, posted a 11.3 percent drop in fourth-quarter net profit on Tuesday, Reuters calculations show, with the company blaming a full-year decline in earnings on provisions.

More from Reuters

January 22, 2013 0 comments
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Morning briefing: 21 Jan 2013

by Executive Staff January 21, 2013
written by Executive Staff

Economics

Gold inched up on Monday to reverse losses from the previous session, bolstered by expectations for aggressive monetary easing from the Bank of Japan.

More from Reuters

 

Average rental rates for residential property in Dubai increased 17 percent last year while villa rentals rose 14 percent following a rebound in the emirate’s real estate sector, according to a new report.

More from Arabian Business

 

Masdar and Morocco have signed a framework agreement that paves the way for investment into the North African country's burgeoning renewable energy sector.

More from The National

 

The number of tourists in Lebanon during 2012 reached 1.36 million, down by 17 percent from 2011, according to the statistics of the Ministry of Tourism (MoT).

More from Lebanon Business News

 

Companies

Growth in Lebanon’s Bank Audi’s local and foreign operations – mainly Turkey and Egypt – have outpaced the contraction of its activity in Syria, the bank reported Sunday as it released its 2012 end year results.

More from The Daily Star

 

WorleyParsons has been awarded a three year contract by Shell Gas Iraq BV to provide project management support and services for the rehabilitation of gas facilities and infrastructure that are part of the scope of Basrah Gas Company (BGC).

More from Worley Parsons

 

Etihad Airways has signed a three-year, multi-million dollar partnership with Sydney Opera House in a bid to further grow its cultural profile in Australia.

More from Gulf Airways

 

Saudi Arabia’s Kingdom Holding, the investment firm of billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, posted an 11.6 per cent increase in its fourth-quarter net profit, it said in a bourse statement on Monday.

More from Gulf Business

 

Saudi Arabian Mining Co (Maaden) posted a forecast-beating 45 per cent increase in its fourth-quarter net profit after it began production of ammonia and di-ammonium phosphate, it said in a bourse statement on Sunday.

More from Reuters

January 21, 2013 0 comments
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The Buzz

Morning briefing: 18 Jan 2013

by Executive Staff January 18, 2013
written by Executive Staff

 

More companies are expected to buy the oil and gas data from Lebanon as the bid for the first round of a prequalification tender in February, the CEO of Britain-based Spectrum has said.

More from The Daily Star

 

The United Arab Emirates’ economy is estimated to have grown by around 4 percent in 2012, little changed from the previous year, and a similar clip is seen in 2013, its economy minister has said.

More from Reuters

 

Two days of talks between the UN atomic agency and Iran have ended in Tehran, apparently without agreement, a diplomatic source told yesterday.

More from The National

 

The Lebanese Cabinet authorized, in its session Thursday, the Energy and Finance ministries to mull funding for a $305 million project aimed at boosting power supply by 260 megawatts.

More from The Daily Star

 

Companies

Dubai stocks rose to the highest level in more than two years as the emirates’ biggest companies prepare to report full-year earnings that investors expect will improve amid an economic recovery.

More from Bloomberg

 

Russian oil major Lukoil has renegotiated its contract for the West Qurna 2 oil field, reducing the production target from 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) to 1.2 million bpd.

More from Iraq Oil Report

 

Elsewhere in Iraq, Baghdad is considering a proposal for British oil giant BP PLC to begin work on a major oil field that lies in territory contested by Baghdad and the country's Kurdish minority.

More from Associated Press

 

Qatar National Bank is said to be among the suitors to submit preliminary bids to buy Rabobank's Indonesian unit in a $400m deal, sources with direct knowledge of the matter have said.

More from Arabian Business

January 18, 2013 0 comments
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Economics & Policy

A beginner’s guide to Lebanon’s oil and gas

by Joe Dyke January 18, 2013
written by Joe Dyke

Lebanon's oil and gas sector has the potential to transform the country's economy. Experts estimate the gas in Lebanon's waters may be worth more than $75 billion, nearly double the country's GDP.

If done well, the resources could be used to reduce debt while also stimulating growth. But if politicians negotiate bad deals or if corruption seeps in, Lebanon could be hit by so-called 'Dutch disease' – with the country becoming inefficient and other sectors suffering.

Without an understanding of the country's oil and gas sector, the public will struggle to hold politicians to account on the issue.

Therefore, we present our beginner's guide to the issues. Click here or on the image below to see the interactive tables.

January 18, 2013 0 comments
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Economics & Policy

Deliverance in the Gulf

by Thomas Schellen & Nicole Walter January 17, 2013
written by Thomas Schellen & Nicole Walter

While the high-rises, gargantuan malls, five-, six- and seven-star hotels, and abundant glitz and glamour are all telling of Dubai’s place as the center of global aviation, much less known are the caravans of cargo that crisscross the globe from Dubai and other hubs in the Gulf Cooperation Council.  

But at a time when the global economy and the big economic blocs are set to enter a tough year — according to the latest host of predictions by the International Monetary Fund, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and the European Central Bank — Gulf countries are investing with fervor in their transportation and logistics networks. 

They are intent on using their advantageous spot on the world map to consolidate their economies. Although the recognition for being the Arabian Gulf’s first “transportation hub” would go to the Sultanate of Oman, which as an explorer nation extended its rule to the Swahili Coast in Africa and pioneered this sector hundreds of years ago, today the United Arab Emirates is the region’s logistics leader. 

“As with passenger demand, Dubai will likely be at the forefront of freight demand as well,” says Saj Ahmad, a regional analyst specialized in aviation and airlines. “Qatar and its new Doha International Airport that opens next summer will have a great advantage in being able to tap into cargo traffic,” he said. “These two airports will compete for business, but in the longer term, it’s evident that the massive investment earmarked for Abu Dhabi means the UAE capital too will be in the mix. In the same way that London, Paris and Frankfurt compete for the spoils of passenger and cargo traffic, so too are Dubai, Doha and Abu Dhabi.”

Logistics is an extremely competitive business and so, true to the spirit of ranking everything, the World Bank has measured the “logistics friendliness” of 155 countries since 2007. In the third edition of this Logistics Performance Index (LPI), published 2012, the UAE is the top performing country of all emerging markets, in 17th place globally, and has overtaken countries such as Australia, Norway, and Ireland when compared with the first LPI. Singapore and Hong Kong rank as the top duo in the 2012 LPI, followed by Finland, Germany and the Netherlands.

According to a private-sector logistics index, The Agility Emerging Markets Logistics Index focused on emerging markets and co-branded by regional company Agility and a UK-based transport consultancy, China and India are the leading markets in the sector.

The G.C.C. Logistics competition

GCC countries that have improved in the LPI from the second edition in 2010 are Qatar, up from 55 to 33, and Saudi Arabia, which advanced to 37 from 40. Bahrain and Oman follow on ranks 48 and 62, respectively, with Kuwait scoring the lowest among its Gulf peers at 70. 

The LPI’s performance indicators include customs, infrastructure, international shipments, logistics competence, tracking and tracing, and timeliness. Oman took a little bit too much of its sweet time, probably with customs delays, and hasn’t quite kept up its infrastructure development. Bahrain and Kuwait took a nosedive on all fronts between 2010 and 2012 but they are eager to regain lost ground.

Kuwait is planning to catch up with port, airport and free-zone expansion plans estimated to total $6 billion, increasing handling capacity by several million tons. Similarly, Bahrain is in the process of spending around $3 billion on its logistics and transport infrastructure. Saudi Arabia, which has a natural competitive edge vis-a-vis its neighbors due to its market size, is no less busy developing its air and seaport capabilities, including building new economic cities and expanding existing metropolises. 

Oman is planning to invest around half a billion dollars into its various free zones to restore its trade position’s ancient glory. 

Qatar already benefits from the recent Logistics Village Qatar but with hosting the 2022 FIFA World Cup, it is also justified to expand its infrastructure further. What this all spells, of course, is increased competition among GCC states and it smells of overcapacity. 

However, according to The Agility Emerging Markets Logistics Index, the UAE and Saudi Arabia feature among what is perceived to be the major logistics market of the future, and the UAE also made it into the list of markets for potential investment for the next five years. Adding Qatar, Kuwait and Oman, all five also rank among the world’s fastest-growing trade lanes. 

 

Center of the world

According to analyst Ahmad, Dubai is currently harnessing new freight traffic into airports such as Dubai World Central (DWC). “Freighter operators love the capacity and space at DWC and they’re there for the long run,” he says. 

DWC, which opened the first runway to cargo flights just over two years ago, recently reported 120 percent growth in cargo volumes since the third quarter of 2011, totaling 58,400 tons in 2012. Air traffic movement, comprising scheduled freight and some charter flights increased by 42 percent. Some 36 carriers operate at the airport.

With capacity also growing in the emirate of Abu Dhabi and Dubai International Airport (DIA), Ahmad reckons that DWC’s triple-digit freight growth will start to come down. Dubai Airports, which has been operating its Dubai Cargo Village at DIA since the 1990s, is further expanding terminal space by 30,000 square meters to be able to handle 4.1 million tons of cargo by 2020. However, it is DWC that will eventually take over all freight operations in the emirate and is expected to cater for 12 million tons of cargo annually once fully operational by around 2020. A highlight of DWC infrastructure is a dedicated feeder road to the important Jebel Ali Free Zone (JAFZA) and Jebel Ali Port. Developed in phases, the strategy of DWC is to converge transport and logistics facilities to maximum catering to a potential market base of more than 1.5 billion consumers across the MENA and South Asia region. 

“DWC is a first-of-its-kind ‘aerotropolis’ in the Middle East, combining a super-airport, planned city and business hub,” says Khalid Ibrahim, vice president Strategy and Corporate Communication at DWC. The concept behind DWC is to create a self-contained economic and social ecosystem built around the world’s largest airport, whose advantages will also add up to deliver significant cost savings in the long term. 

Activity at the airport is going to increase in 2013 as construction of one non-automated and two automated cargo terminals will increase the total cargo capacity to 1.4 million tons per annum. 

While hyped-up initial expectations for aviation at DWC had to be taken down a few notches in the financial crisis and post-crisis years, it now plans to launch commercial passenger airline services. “Final preparations are underway for the passenger terminal and technically we are ready to accommodate commercial passenger aircraft within a short period of time,” Ibrahim says. 

DWC’s Logistics District has seen the first corporate tenants move in but the focus is on flexibility that would allow the Logistics District to accommodate long-term projects. “This is a crucial aspect of our strategy for the Logistics District and the entire DWC project, especially as the logistics industry plays a very important role in the long-term strategic plans of Dubai and the UAE,” he adds.   Dubai Airports Strategic Plan 2020 calls for an investment of around $7.8 billion, which includes the expansion of DIA terminals. The new Concourse 3, purpose-built for the A380 fleet of Emirates Airlines, is increasing the number of airplane stands by 60 percent by 2015. Based on past performances at DIA, Dubai Airports forecasts a cumulative annual passenger growth of 7.2 percent and expects to serve 98 million passengers by 2018.

The expansions of aviation in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, where the Abu Dhabi Airports Company (ADAC) is on a multi-billion dollar expansion plan, are reflected in the cargo volumes handled by the UAE-based airlines. ADAC reports cargo was up by nearly 25 percent to 48,000 tons last September compared to September 2011. 

Emirates Airlines, reporting its financial year at the end of September 2012, said its cargo volume had increased by 16 percent since April. “The cargo volumes have increased significantly, and for the three months ending September 30, 2012, the freight load factor for Air Arabia cargo exceeded full capacity offered. This represents an increase of 36 percent as compared to the same period in 2011,” Sharjah-based Air Arabia wrote in a statement.

Looking ahead

It appears that the GCC has not only made it onto the map of global logistics but the Gulf has captured a pivotal spot. 

“If you want to compete on the global stage you must have a good base in the Middle East to support rapid growth,” says a spokesperson of Emirates Sky Cargo, arguing that the investments and professionalization of the logistics industry in the region over the past few years have placed Dubai as a great hub to channel flows of cargo for supply chains. 

When the UAE celebrated their 41st National Day early in December, the obligatory reviews of last year’s achievements and outlooks for 2013 highlighted the growth of aviation and logistics among core economic achievements. The new Khalifa Industrial Zone Abu Dhabi (KIZAD) industrial and logistics zone and Khalifa Port in Abu Dhabi, just a short trucking hop across the internal border from Dubai’s DWC and JAFZA, had its official opening in September 2012 and KIZAD’s anchor tenant, Emirates Aluminum Smelter (EMAL) is already operating a berth at Khalifa Port.

The port in December took over all container traffic from Abu Dhabi’s older Mina Zayed Port, three months ahead of schedule. KIZAD’s phased development will see an additional 220,000 square meters of warehousing (of which 120,000 will be a free zone) coming to life by the second quarter of next year.  

For the next 12 months, the list of new investments and project implementations promises that the capacities will certainly increase, irrespective of what surprises the global economy holds in store.

January 17, 2013 0 comments
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The Buzz

Morning briefing: 17 Jan 2013

by Executive Staff January 17, 2013
written by Executive Staff

The World Bank revised Lebanon’s real GDP growth for last year downward from 2.8 percent to 1.7 percent.

More from The Daily Star

 

The United Arab Emirates sees no need to cut oil production, the UAE’s oil minister has said, after Gulf OPEC ally Saudi Arabia slashed output in late 2012.

More from Reuters

 

The share of renewables in the global energy mix has increased over the past decade to more than 15 percent but doubts remain over whether a 2030 target of 30 percent is achievable, delegates to an international conference said Wednesday.

More from AFP

 

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Wednesday that Iran must move away from dependence on oil revenue to overcome Western sanctions that have slowed the economy and disrupted foreign trade.

More from Associated Press

 

Companies

Intercontinental Hotels Group has said Saudi Arabia and the UAE are two markets representing the largest opportunity for growth in the Middle East in 2013.

More from AME Info

 

Lebanon’s craft beer brand, 961, has begun exporting to the US market.

More from The Daily Star

 

The number of passengers using Rafik Hariri International Airport increased 5 percent in 2012, said the Directorate of Civil Aviation on Wednesday, adding that growth came despite a sharp decline in transit flights.

More from The Daily Star

January 17, 2013 0 comments
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Morning briefing: 16 Jan 2013

by Executive Staff January 16, 2013
written by Executive Staff

Syria has started to allow private firms to import fuel and plans to eliminate all tariffs on many basic commodities as it seeks to cope with shortages, soaring prices and public discontent in the midst of a civil war.

More from Reuters

 

The number of real estate sales in Lebanon plunged in 2012 but the total value of transactions grew by 3.8 percent, statistics published by the Directorate of Land Registry showed.

More from The Daily Star

 

Hundreds of Palestinian government workers protested outside their prime minister's office on Tuesday saying they had not received a full salary in almost three months amid a deepening financial crisis.

More from The Daily Star

 

The central bank of Egypt says the government has accepted the resignation of its deputy governor, less than a week after her boss said that he was quitting.

More from Reuters

 

Oman's government has asked its departments to review policies on hiring of foreign workers, in a sign that the sultanate, like some other Gulf states, may try to shift more jobs from expatriates to its own citizens.

More from Arabian Business

 

French President Francois Hollande discussed the possibility of the UAE buying Rafale fighter jets during his visit to the Gulf country and said a deal hinged on price.

More from Reuters

 

Companies

Shares in Dubai's Emaar Properties may rise on a report the developer is planning to spin off its malls unit and Turkish business, but the company said it does not have immediate plans for this.

More from Reuters

 

Dubai-based property lender Amlak Finance is in talks with creditors to restructure debts of around AED7bn (US$1.9bn), in the latest attempt to resurrect a victim of Dubai's property crash.

More from Reuters

 

Saudi Arabia's telecoms regulator has a set a May 4 deadline for companies to submit applications for three mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) licences in the kingdom.

More from Arabian Business

 

 

January 16, 2013 0 comments
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Economics & Policy

Why does Lebanon flood so badly?

by Benjamin Redd January 15, 2013
written by Benjamin Redd

At least five people, including a seven-month old baby, were killed in Lebanon last week — the tragic legacy of the monster storm that struck the country. It was the worst of its kind in ten years, ripping into communities and destroying homes.

Yet while the storm was unusually ferocious, flooding happens nearly every year in the country. Heavy rains cause chaos in low-lying areas and landslides in the mountains — damaging property and injuring people, sometimes fatally. In both 2012 and 2010, at least one person was killed as a result of extreme weather in Lebanon.

The storms that cause these tragedies cannot be averted but is Lebanon’s failing infrastructure partly to blame for the extent of the destruction? That is certainly the view of Nadim Farajalla, Associate Professor of Hydrology and Water Resources at the American University of Beirut.

Deathly shallows

Farajalla identifies three major factors contributing to flooding: people living in low-lying areas, barriers to the natural flow of rivers, and refuse clogging the drainage system.

“The biggest problem during this storm was that people have been [living] in the river or along the river floodplain,” he said. In some areas, including Beirut’s southern suburb of Hay al-Solm, poorer residents in recent years have constructed homes on river banks, limiting the space for water to flow. Farajalla said that such constriction creates an effective dam, raising water levels further upstream. Furthermore once the water passes through the constriction, it flows more rapidly — and destructively — towards those downstream.

But encroaching buildings aren’t the only cause of flooding. A government official, who spoke to Executive on the condition of anonymity as he was not permitted to speak to the media, said some of the blame lies with poor bridge design. “Some bridges aren’t capable of handling such runoff and high waters,” he said. In poorer areas where government services are lacking, these bridges can be small and make-shift, built without review from officials or engineers, and lacking enough height to accommodate flood waters. Farajalla echoed this concern, saying “there are so many crossings on the rivers themselves that they have created constrictions that make backwaters” when the rivers rise.

In Beirut, this problem is only compounded by the city’s trash problem. “People dump their refuse in the river, which ends up in the [underground] drainage system,” Farajalla said, adding that it accumulates to form barriers at low bridges and clog the subsurface network of drainage pipes. Such was the case last week in Beirut’s eastern Karantina neighborhood, where drainage systems backed up so much that the main road became a river.

In the capital, this underground drainage system has been considerably upgraded since the end of the Lebanese civil war in 1990, but there are still significant issues. Maintenance of subsurface pipes involves both clearing barriers caused by trash and sediment, and inspecting and repairing cracks and natural wear of the tunnels themselves. “A network is only as good as its maintenance,” says Farajalla, adding that the work “has not been done on a regular basis.” The government official was more blunt: “no one is cleaning the drainage system before the winter rainy season,” he claimed, adding “this is the number one problem in Beirut.”

A more general complaint revolves around contractors and inspectors. Noting that contractors will sometimes cut corners, Farajalla says, “[inspecting authorities] often do not have the personnel available, either in numbers or in training… What we need is people to follow through and check the execution.”

Punishing the poorest

These problems tend to affect the most vulnerable – poor families, including many refugees – the hardest. This is a problem found in many nations where infrastructure is sub-standard: low-lying land in a floodplain is cheap and close to jobs, so during periods of light flooding, poorer people will move in, often forced to find alternative housing by a lack of government planning and oversight. However, light-flood periods do not last forever, and eventually nature takes its course — sometimes to disastrous effect.

According to a paper by Carlos Tucci of Brazil’s Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, when this happens, governments have two options for long-term solutions: building expensive drainage networks or relocating people to higher ground. But, as Tucci points out, such solutions can be politically problematic.

In Lebanon’s case relocation would still require a large investment from the government. “These people have left their villages and come here to find a job, and it’s a horrible existence, so what do we do? Who pays for this?” asks Farajalla. “These people have paid enough by having their homes damaged.”

Building the ark together

Any solution to Lebanon’s flooding problems will have to be multifaceted, and include zoning for development, roadways and bridges, subsurface drainage, inspection regimes and maintenance. Any such remedy would have to involve several parties including individual municipalities, the Ministry of Energy and Water, the Ministry of Public Works, refuse collection companies and the general public.

Speaking about road drainage, Farajalla argued that that “there should be a ministerial team assigned to each municipality or grouping of municipalities along a highway to ensure that local roads do not generate runoff onto the highway, and then that the highway is well-maintained,” adding that “they have to generate some coordination mechanism” between the municipalities and the Ministry of Public Works. Underground, he says, “maintenance should be continuous.”

Of course, the government and waste collectors cannot shoulder all of the responsibility for keeping sewerage lines clean. “It takes one plastic bag to block a [drainage] grate,” notes Farajalla. “People have a responsibility not to throw things into the drainage network, not to litter the roads, and to help the municipality by reporting problem areas.”

Given the diverse array of parties responsible for quality stormwater management, it comes as little surprise that the government official who spoke to Executive was pessimistic about the possibility of fast implementation: “There are many plans in the government [to address this problem] but I don’t think it will be solved soon.” Given Lebanon’s weather, that may mean more pain ahead for the most vulnerable.

January 15, 2013 0 comments
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Since its first edition emerged on the newsstands in 1999, Executive Magazine has been dedicated to providing its readers with the most up-to-date local and regional business news. Executive is a monthly business magazine that offers readers in-depth analyses on the Lebanese world of commerce, covering all the major sectors – from banking, finance, and insurance to technology, tourism, hospitality, media, and retail.

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