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North Africa

Investment cracks the shell

by Executive Staff May 1, 2008
written by Executive Staff

After years of international isolation and embargo, Libya has begun a slow process of opening its economy to the outside world. Foreign players are acquiring stakes in Libyan banks, household-name hotel brands are muscling in on the market and the world’s largest energy firms are queuing up to get their hands on Libya’s immense oil and gas reserves.

On the back of this — particularly the record oil prices which have propelled impressive growth in the Libyan economy since 2003 — the real estate market is beginning to draw the attention of keen investor interests from Europe, the Middle East and further afield.

The fundamentals look good, but with an unwieldy bureaucracy, an untried market and an uncertain political future, many developers are still hesitant to enter into one of the few remaining virgin markets around the Mediterranean.

Potential awaits

With a population of just over six million and some of the world’s largest oil and gas reserves, Libya in some ways resembles the situation of several of the Gulf markets a decade ago. It is also relatively stable, has massive tourism potential and, even better, lies right on the doorstep of Europe.

Unsurprisingly, this has spurred greater interest in Libya’s real estate sector, which shows some indications of being on the verge of a boom. A burgeoning business sector is driving demand for new office and residential space, while investing in property is starting to gain popularity amongst local groups and wealthy Libyans. Construction costs are low, there is a ready supply of labor and a number of players have already dipped their toes in the water.

Yet until recently real estate in Libya was off-limits, and it was only in the late 1990s that the authorities eased legislation on private property ownership, which previously had been considered contrary to the socialist leanings of Colonel Gaddafi’s blueprint for the country.

Following the resolution of the long-running Lockerbie bombing trial in 2003 and the lifting of EU and US sanctions, Gaddafi has appeared to take a new track by gradually allowing foreign investment into various fields and seeking joint development ventures for large pieces of land on the coastline to support the country’s ambitious tourism program.

Even so, the real estate sector remains restrictive. Individual foreigners cannot buy property in Libya, with the apparent exception of Maltese citizens who enjoy a privileged status thanks to a longstanding reciprocal investment agreement between the two countries. Larger investors can lease land from the government for up to 99 years, as long as it falls within certain areas which have been designated for development, but so far there is no freehold.

Drivers of demand

Keen to invest enormous windfalls from oil revenues, the government is emerging as one of the key drivers of the real estate market. A number of rather opaque entities, usually controlled by the sons of Colonel Gaddafi, are teaming up with seasoned foreign firms to build a series of large-scale joint ventures which have only been signed within the past one or two years and have yet to break ground.

Other factors also give the market some rosy prospects. The first is the rising numbers of foreign visitors. Libya’s hotel market is seriously undersupplied, and even if tourist levels stay at their relatively modest current levels of around a million

arrivals per year, demand from business visitors is set to soar thanks to the burgeoning private economy and the growing numbers of energy companies operating in the country.

 For now, the only five-star hotel in Tripoli is the Corinthia Bab Africa, which reportedly enjoys an occupancy rate of between 95-100% despite commanding a rack rate of more than $450 for a single room. It will be joined by a series of other high-end hotels in 2009 and 2010, with the Sheraton and Intercontinental both set to manage properties in the capital and the other mega-projects including hotels in their master plans.

Another advantage is the thriving business environment, even if this still depends largely on energy-related companies. Tripoli suffers from a lack of quality office space, with many companies forced to convert residential villas or erect their own buildings. There are only three quality office towers in the capital, for instance, all of which have zero vacancy rates.

Libyans themselves also constitute an important market for new villas and apartments. Demographic growth is rapid, at around 2% a year, and there is a sizable Libyan diaspora that may look to move back home or acquire a second residence as the local economy becomes a more attractive place to work and live. The government is also building low-cost apartments to bridge the shortfall in housing, which is thought to be in the hundreds of thousands of units.

Scouting investments

The experience of a handful of foreign developers who already have projects running in Libya may be instructive for more risk-averse investors.

One of these is the Malta-based Corinthia Group, which already owns the Corinthia Hotel in Tripoli and enjoys a long-standing relationship with Libya, and now is building a beachside residential complex called Palm City. All the villas and apartments are for rent only, and the first phase is scheduled to be ready by the end of 2008.

The Pakistani Hashoo Group is another early mover, building a 92,000 square meter tower called the Burj al-Bahr on the eastern suburbs of Tripoli. The project has already been beset by delays and construction problems, but the developers say that the returns will still be more than worthwhile.

European investors are showing interest too, with the UK-based Magna Group building a mixed-use development and the Swiss company, Berocko, putting up two beachside hotels just outside Tripoli. Korean firm Daewoo is also building a hotel in the city center which will reportedly be managed by Marriott.

Emaar, the Dubai-based developer which has myriad projects around the region, has also been studying the potential for a completely new city on the shores of the Mediterranean which would have its own legislative system and free-zone status. If and when it goes ahead, the project will be by far the largest in the country.

Two of the other major Gulf groups believed to enter the market in the coming years are the Kuwait-based Kharafi Group and the government-owned Qatari Diar holding company, both of which are reportedly looking to develop seafront plots in Tripoli in partnership with the government. Lastly, in late 2007 the Bahrain-based Gulf Finance House announced plans to build an Energy City worth an estimated $3.8 billion. 

And while so far most of the investment has been in Tripoli, Libyan developers claim that even higher returns can be found in Benghazi, the second-largest city which lies further along the eastern coastline.

“You can buy something at 100 in Tripoli and sell it at 150 a year later,” says one Libyan property investor. “But in Benghazi, because the market is even more immature, you can buy at 100 and sell at 200. The margins are even higher.”

Tricky business

As one might expect though, things tend to move a little slower in Libya. Signing a multi-million dollar development deal is one thing and actually beginning work is another, as the long delays in these first projects have shown.

Investing here remains a cumbersome and bureaucratic affair, despite government promises to make things easier for foreign companies to establish a legal presence on Libyan soil, and there are also sizable risks. Rules and regulations can change suddenly, unaccountably and at the whim of an unpredictable leader, while no-one really knows for sure who will take over — and how — after Gaddafi’s reign comes to an end.

The laws on foreign investment mean that investors need to team up with Libyan partners in order to buy — as oppose to lease — property in Libya, and more importantly, it is too early to find many tried and tested examples of previous success stories.

 Other challenges include obtaining government permission to develop larger plots of land, which often requires the foreign investor to contribute to building local infrastructure, the idea being that investors should play a role in upgrading roads, electricity and water supplies and other amenities in undeveloped areas. And with unemployment unofficially running at more than 30%, large-scale tourism and hotel projects are also rated on how many jobs they will create for Libyans.

Yet despite the fact that regulations are unlikely to be liberalized further in the near future, opportunities to invest in such virgin markets as Libya are becoming increasingly scarce in the Middle East — and especially on the shores of the Mediterranean. With the market likely to be transformed by 2012, some might argue that now is the time to take the plunge.

May 1, 2008 0 comments
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North Africa

Woven like a sweater

by Executive Staff May 1, 2008
written by Executive Staff

As the second largest foreign exchange earner behind tourism, and the employer of a substantial amount of Tunisia’s workforce, the textile sector is an engine of economic growth for the country, but some minor changes in European legislation have challenged the competitiveness of Tunisian firms, who rely on Europe’s market for the bulk of their exports.

The European Union recently abolished import quotas on Chinese textiles, effectively opening the door for low-cost Chinese cotton and silk, while competitors are worried that Asian product might now flood the market, pushing down prices and affecting the volume sold of more expensive product offerings.

The end of quotas on Chinese textile exports weighs heavily on the economies of countries around the Mediterranean. “Approximately one third of jobs in the area is likely to be severely affected by this competition”, says Jean-François Limantour, President of Circle Euro-Mediterranean, an association of leaders in textiles and clothing in the region.

With seven million direct jobs, the textile and clothing sector is the leading industrial employer in almost all the countries of the region. In Tunisia and Morocco, over 200,000 people are employed in the textile industry. In Turkey, one million employees work in the sector, accounting for a quarter of all industrial jobs. These three countries export 90% of their production to Europe, virtually without tariffs.

As some might have predicted, Moroccan textile exports fell by 22% in January and February 2008, according to Mohamed Tazi, General Manager of the Moroccan Association of Textile and Clothing Industries.

However, while some might worry, Tunisian firms remain to a large extent unaffected and continue to celebrate 2007’s year-on-year growth of 18.5%. Garment exports also continue to perform well, buoying demand for Tunisian textiles with export increases of 14% in value and 4% in volume. Underwear, in particular, is the forte of Tunisian garment manufacturers and has continued to register strong increases. According to a local boss of lingerie production, Samir Ben Abdallah, “the Chinese are disarmed when they face us in the high-end of the market.”

Geographically, the customers and providers of Tunisian textiles did undergo slight changes in 2007; however, the country as a whole continues to retain its traditional clientele. Exports to France, Tunisia’s main market, grew by 12%, while Italy, Tunisia’s second largest recipient of Tunisian textile, saw an increase in its imports by over 20%, compared to 5% in 2005 and 9% in 2006. Portugal recorded the largest increases in textile imports from Tunisia, registering 78.7% in 2006 and 45.5% in 2007.

New models

Increased competition from China is forcing Tunisian firms to rethink their business models. Traders are looking to forge links with new markets and, more importantly, to put pressure on market niches such as textiles, which means technical fibers used in well-defined applications will have special characteristics like flammable and electro-conductive insulation. These so-called smart textiles are used in aerospace, flak jackets and sports equipment and would add to the repertoire of Tunisian firms who already specialize in the high-end textile market.

Tunisia has also pushed for certain sector reforms to boost the competitiveness of national firms. The country-wide effort to upgrade the sector’s capability has reported “more than encouraging” results, according to Mehdi Abdelmoula of Maille Group. The program has allowed his company “to strengthen its material and immaterial structures to modernize its process, organize its management, and therefore improve its productivity. The upgrade also enabled us to have more input from our management and develop strategic thinking in the medium and long term.”

Sub-or-co-contracting?

This also means that to adapt to the new situation created by the flood of Asian products on the European market, Tunisia has chosen to adopt a strategy oriented towards the finished product through co-contracting with other companies. The strategy appears to be bearing fruit as the amount of exports in the sector hit an all-time high of $4.3 billion in 2007.

To cope with competition from China, Mediterranean countries were encouraged to move to manufacturing finished products instead of remaining producers of unfinished products. Regional firms have asked the EU for technical assistance for retraining of textile workers.

However, the idea does have its critics. Abdelmoula does not believe partnering with other textiles firms as an alliance against Chinese firms is a viable option. Although he does believe that it is an alternative resource for his foreign clients, maintaining a long-term outlook helps further brand establishment and maintain better standards of quality. It also allows firms to develop a distribution and collection network.

May 1, 2008 0 comments
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North Africa

Selling to the free market

by Executive Staff May 1, 2008
written by Executive Staff

Since Algeria’s privatization agenda began in 2005, the process has continued to play a lead role in attracting foreign direct investment (FDI), paving the way for further liberalization plans after the country’s economy suffered years of mismanagement under a socialist regime. However, the privatization of Algerian industry has not delivered the expected results. Investment has been hampered by delays in the privatization plans. Critics doubt the ability of the government to privatize the near 100 firms they targeted for sales in 2008. The question of land, in particular, is often among the main obstacles. Asked about the meager results, Algeria’s Minister of Industry and Investment Promotion Abdelhamid Temmar said “the economic problem regarding land will be permanently resolved before the end of 2008”.

Verifiable data is still hard to obtain as Temmar’s ministry does not follow the strictest of transparency standards. Balance sheets are not fully disclosed and parties involved in privatization deals are still kept in waters murky to the public eye. However, property transfers have amounted to $1.9 billion, with capital contributions of $507 million, which have allowed the government to sell companies without their debts.

The former Algerian Minister of Finance, Ghazi Hidouci Hamrouche, commented on the lethargic nature of the privatization process. He said “the lack of pseudo-liberal regulation and form leads to a deadlock. The origin of the crisis stems from the inability of the government to privatize banks and other large national companies, although attempts were made to sell off state assets to foreign companies.”

Hamrouche noted the particularly poor governance used in privatizing banks during the current credit crisis wondering “is this the time to open our system to uncontrolled speculation? Should we do so at a time when some are renationalized or bought cheaply? Be careful not to privatize the profits when things are going well and socialize the losses when everything goes wrong.”

“Banks are not like other businesses,” advised Hamrouche. He warned that “we must address the issue of their ownership in the context of fiscal and monetary policy. They are at the epicenter of the functioning of the economy. We cannot simply ignore these choices.”

Temmar himself recognized the poor policy of upgrading business at such a slow pace, mentioning “there is a quarantine of companies that have really been affected by the upgrade.” The lack of domestic enterprise is a situation that will be threatened as Algeria accedes to the World Trade Organization (WTO) sometime before the end of 2008.

Aware of privatization’s mixed results, Algeria’s government has decided to accelerate the process, mainly through financial incentives, simplifying administrative procedures, adopting a comprehensive strategy to transform the national economy, and promoting privatization, especially as foreign investors continue to attack Algeria for the lack of transparency on the sale of public enterprises.

Temmar has recently toured Europe to promote transparency of Algerian companies eligible for privatization to potential investors. According to him, “we are targeting the regions which will enable us to hold road shows based on the potential of the regions and what they can bring us.” For Algeria, foreign investment via privatization offers industries a chance for revival after much of the domestic industry remained stalled for several years.

With a privatization that could take three to six months with regular, transparent follow-up assessments made thereafter, Algeria could find an influx of foreign capital with a firm-state social contract implemented if the government pushes investors to adjust action plans to add value to the nation’s economy and workforce. One such possibility is strengthening economic links within Algeria’s economy. Large-scale infrastructure development through economic support programs promise to make significant improvements in integrating transport and telecommunications networks, in addition to upgrading payment systems.

For 2008, Algeria Telecom and Crédit Populaire d’Algérie (CPA) are set for privatization. The former has attracted attention from 45 possible buyers seeking a share varying between 35% and 51%. Although CPA’s privatization was stalled in 2007, the sale is likely to go through eventually, marking one of the largest privatizations yet. A slew of other companies also set for privatization, include electric and manufacturing firms as well as Sonatro and EVSM, who specialize in road works, chemical manufacturers Enasel Alphyt, and Aldar. Strategic firms like Sonatrach, Sonelgaz and Air Algeria remain off the privatization agenda.

May 1, 2008 0 comments
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North Africa

Harboring commerce

by Executive Staff May 1, 2008
written by Executive Staff

On a swath of coastal land 40 km east of Tangier, a project is underway that bills itself as a revolution for the Moroccan economy and a solution to the problem of rural neglect. Comprising a brand-new mega-capacity port that opens onto the Mediterranean and Atlantic, road and railway infrastructural renovations, and special zones of logistics, industrial, and trade activity, the TangierMed project is set to become a nexus of international trade, investment, and manufacturing.

The project’s 2002 launch with a $5.57 billion investment was Moroccan King Mohammed VI’s “strategic decision to transform the region into an investment hub” through a “major restructuring project consisting of a commercial and industrial port on the banks of the straits, east of Tangier.” The King mandated the TangierMed Special Agency (TMSA) to administer the project’s free zones, Port Authority, and regional development

From its ideal geographical situation at the crossroads of Africa and Europe, Tangier has long attracted investors and traders. Even during Morocco’s colonization between European powers, the French, Spanish, and English signed a treaty declaring Tangiers an international zone of neutrality. The Tangier Free Zone continues to draw investors seeking a place to conduct their business without tariffs, taxes, and duties. TangierMed is a facelift to the region by maintaining the usual fiscal incentives in the free zone while adding high-capacity port facilities and incentives offered to designated industries like electronics, aeronautics and automotives. The project will include a deep-water port for containers and passengers, a 98 hectare free zone for storage and quality control, export-oriented industrial free zones throughout the region, and road and rail works as added transport infrastructure. The main container terminal was opened in 2007, but the project is expected to be fully operational by 2015.

In an interview with Executive, TMSA Chairman Said Elhadi explained the project as a “global concept” focusing on competitiveness and logistics. For him, the distinct advantage is “the geographical location, where you have a high concentration of maritime traffic.” Wedged between two continents, the location makes the project “very interesting for the optimization of flows.” He explained that a platform allows connections to Europe, Asia, Africa, the US, and South America with more effective operations and lower costs, as well as suitable transit times.

Rapid construction and the success of early operations are proving that business affairs in Morocco need not be marred by corruption and sluggishness. Experts attribute the remarkable efficiency of the TMSA to its special status as a business corporation with public power perrogatives. Another TMSA official explained “this kind of port would not be possible without a public-private partnership.” The private-public partnership gives TangierMed the best of both sectors, while eliminating the obstacles of corruption and lack of transparency that mark many business dealings in this country.

A marriage in political economy

The government supports the project with a large financial endowment and tax-free incentives that make it extremely competitive. But the private sector handles management of day-to-day operations and outsources contracts to proven experts in the shipping field. Shipping, as a monopolistic industry, is simply not the business of government. Shipping companies have the expertise and the ability to cut costs.

Taking its cues from this project, the government has been discreetly privatizing aspects of the state-run Casablanca port, which is reputed to be the most expensive and least efficient in the Mediterranean, as well as others. It inaugurated a port reform in 2006 that replaced the state monopoly Ports Exploitation Office (ODEP) with a new Ports Exploitation Company that the Minister of Transport and Public Works hints will be privatized later on.  Elhadi explained the near parity of investment between the public’s share, at $2.4 billion, and the private investment, at $2 billion. He believed that “to make the terminals work, you have to have a global reach. Otherwise it doesn’t work. You need to have operators that are global, which have the capacity to bring in global traffic to markets in Africa and Asia. You cannot do it with government or local means so you need to target the real partners. And it’s also an issue in the way to make sure that once you have these private partners there, you interface between the private partners and the public players but ensure that both parties will serve the project’s real purposes”.

Can shipping be that sexy?

Sheer magnitude and good taste are adding to high expectations for TangierMed. The port will feature four container terminals and special zones for industrial, logistics, and trade activity. So far, it is making international waves and has gained a reputation as a strikingly modern, glamorous and well-executed project. A TangierMed II is even underway to dramatically expand shipping capacity in response to growing demand. When TangierMed II is completed, the port will have a capacity of 8.5 million TEU, making it the largest port in the Mediterranean. Estimations put the overall cost of the complex, before the TangierMed II extension, at $1 billion, and major financing has come from a $200 million investment from the Hassan II Fund and a loan of $300 million from the Abu Dhabi Investment Fund.

As far as industry is concerned, insiders are saying there is a political will to court automotives. The automotive alliance Renault Nissan signed an agreement with the government in September 2007 for a joint manufacturing investment that CEO Carlos Ghosn predicts will be more cost-effective and competitive than existing plants in Turkey, Romania, and China. The complex will produce Renault’s Logan series and a new generation of low-cost Nissan vehicles, mostly for export. The operation will be the biggest in the country, and among the biggest in the Mediterranean, with a manufacturing capacity of 400,000 vehicles a year. Local press reports that planned investments will reach somewhere between $950 million and $1.6 billion.

Additionally, a US manufacturer of electric and electronic systems for the automotive industry will build a $36 million plant in the free trade zone, according to an agreement reported in March by local press. The main clients for the new 60-hectare Delphi Group plant will be Fiat, PSA, Renault and Opel. The firm cited low-cost labor and proximity to Europe as its principal incentives for moving into the region. Free trade agreements with the United States, Arab countries and Europe are sure to incite more investors to follow suit.

Importing development

Infrastructure improvements are also redefining the Northern landscape, in the interest of the King’s stated purpose to achieve an integrated regional development. Poor infrastructure has long proven a barrier to transportation of goods and people, but now government officials are prioritizing the transport sector. According to Karim Ghellab, Minister of Transport, the rate of road building has doubled over the past decade. In addition to bigger and better infrastructure, TangierMed will help job creation to the tune of 145,000 positions over the next 15 years as well as social development.

For employment, the TMSA has already implemented training and education programs in the region as the project will staunch the high urban unemployment, hitting 33% in some estimates”. However, according to one TMSA official, the target region is limited to 500 km, which can limit the impact of education and development of rural populations.

Elhadi believes that others might come from elsewhere in Morocco to take the up slack in a burgeoning job market, but “with the education and training programs in the region, within five to seven years it should be ok.” The project’s TangierMed Foundation is an initiative to devote 1% of all investments to social development in the region. The $16 million already secured will be going to the region’s primary schools to train the next wave of workers for 2020.

May 1, 2008 0 comments
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North Africa

Trade across the Maghreb

by Executive Staff May 1, 2008
written by Executive Staff

In 1988 the leaders of Algeria, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, and Tunisia gathered to lay the framework for what would later become the Arab Maghreb Union (AMU), a regional organization mandated with several responsibilities, the most prominent of which is to facilitate regional economic integration between the five North African states. Over the years, the AMU has sought to establish itself as a veritable trading regime on par with the European Union (EU) in terms of scope and depth, but the organization’s goals have not been realized, nor have the region’s economies come even close to the integration found between other regional organizations.

While its members or leadership might not be at fault, the AMU specifically, and regional economic integration in general, need a rethink as other opportunities present themselves in the near future. Caught between saving a defunct organization like the AMU or starting anew with Europe under the framework of a Mediterranean Union, North Africa’s economies, particularly those of Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia, might choose to opt for the latter.

North Africa continues to lack the proper atmosphere for regionalization, witnessed by both disappointing trade data signaling continued low regional trade flows and evidence of a lack of political will to overcome differences. The politics of the region remain fragmented, land borders are still tough, if not impossible to physically navigate, and the tariff schedules from years ago are still standing.

Executive examined the failures and future of economic integration à la Maghreb, and offers this insight on the lack of regionalization and its causes, as well as future prospects for the region’s countries.

Political problems

Few regional organizations have suffered the same number of political setbacks as the AMU. In the 1990s, Libya withdrew from the organization after AMU member states recognized the UN-imposed sanctions on the country following the verdict of Libya’s involvement in the Lockerbie bombing.

Every economic organization has a regional champion, usually the biggest of a group’s economies or another determinant based on scale. In the 1990s, Algeria faced its own domestic political strife, including a civil war with Islamic fundamentalists and other issues of stability, leaving it too embattled to head the AMU. With Algeria out, Tunisia and Morocco failed to pick up the torch, nurturing instead their own trade relations with the EU. The lack of political will and economic readiness left the AMU effectively stalled between 1995 and 1999, when the organization existed only in name.

While a lack of political will is no longer ubiquitous, the reemergence of old conflicts is brewing. This could at any moment severely threaten a weak organization like the AMU. Mauritania and Libya are still sorting out their own tensions after a coup d’état launched against Mauritania in 2005, which the authorities effectively squashed and afterwards accused Libya’s security services of having been involved in. Algeria and Morocco continue to stumble over their territorial chessboard in the Western Sahara, with Morocco remaining accusatory over Algerian support for the Polisario Front’s struggle for independence. With the land border still closed between Algeria and Morocco after fourteen years, the AMU will have a tough time bringing about the free movement of the means of production between the two biggest economies of the AMU.

Grabbing globalization

For the twenty years after the AMU’s inception, the neo-liberal paradigm came to dominate international trade theories. After watching Europe strengthen its international position, developing markets scrambled to form unified entities to mimic the EU. Countries pursued a mixture of strategies to best maximize their position, but the EU format — starting with a small core of states and basing itself at first on intra-industry trade, only later moving towards notions of a regional politico-economic entity — proved the strongest of the possible options.

For the AMU, working “towards the facilitation of the free movement of individuals, goods, capital, and services” was the most economically relevant of its five initial mandates. The AMU’s common development strategy for the Maghreb added three more goals, including a free trade zone for goods and services, customs union and common market, as well as a fully-fledged economic union. Progress, however, has been kept on the backburner as member states continue to rely on overlapping bilateral agreements with each other. This keeps intra-Maghreb trade accounting for little as a proportion of aggregate trade figures.

This lack of regional integration has continued to push North African governments to look elsewhere, rather than to their Maghreb neighbors, to export, to import, and to tie themselves economically. European neighbors have historically accounted for higher trade levels with AMU economies, but with little power to bargain collectively for a better trade status with Europe, the organization’s countries continue to show little prowess in trade negotiations, receiving instead the policies chosen by states on the northern side of the Mediterranean, the most prominent of which being France and Spain.

The past five years were perhaps the best in terms of investment climate and political fervor for North African states, particularly those of Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia,  comprising French North Africa. However, the politics and inherent inability of AMU members led to an entity in name only, which left it toothless to establish a regional trading order. Having missed the past twenty years in catching the winds of globalization, can North Africa continue to pursue long term economic objectives of privatization, liberalization, and diversification as separate cells?

Skeletons in the closet

While recent AMU activity has centered on discussing the possibilities of an eventual monetary union and the creation of the Maghreb Bank of Investment and Exterior Trade, the organization has fundamental principles of economics that it must first address on the domestic front. The economic problems running rampant in AMU economies are posing a serious threat to any continued regionalization plans as countries have to be in good macro economic health and share similar figures for economies to merge and any customs union to become a success.

Algeria’s own internal troubles were highlighted by Abdulhamid Temmar, Minister of Industry and the Promotion of Investments, who believes “the transformation began 10 years ago. For this it was necessary to first assure the political and social stability, because we exited the 1990s from a very difficult situation.” Other AMU member states must keep this in the back of their mind and pursue regionalization within the framework used by the most successful organizations.

Among his ministry’s merits is its spending of around $30 million for local development in certain regions and to guarantee calm. As he noted, “We have partially reconstructed indispensable infrastructure. There were schools that had to be opened. There were necessary gifts to the poor and the most disadvantaged […] there was also macro economic stability and this is what we achieved between 2000 and 2004.”

Morocco’s Minister of Foreign Trade, Abdelatif Maazouz, believes that his country’s “biggest challenge is competitiveness and integration into regional economic groupings dynamic in order to cope with increasing global competition. Such a challenge can be met only through integration and the elimination of tariffs within the framework of a genuine free trade area guaranteeing the free movement of goods, services, capital and persons.” To this end, Morocco did support Algeria’s accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO), which Maazouz believes “is likely to boost bilateral trade between our two countries on the basis of WTO rules.”

More optimistically, however, countries in the region are pushing the right domestic plans for liberalization through privatization. Moves to liberalize telecoms and other markets has provided countries with more efficient systems and an influx of foreign capital to use in financing industrial diversification. Plans to establish off shoring sites for European firms as well as research and development (R&D) centers, is refreshing news from a region which has relied to a large extent on its natural resource abundance, in phosphates and hydrocarbons. While hydrocarbon prices have boosted export to import ratios — accounting for 243% in Algeria, 58% in Morocco, and 83% in Tunisia — price levels are not guaranteed forever.

Inter and intra Maghreb trade

Data indicates a boom is occurring in aggregate bilateral trade between Maghreb countries, but while the numbers look great on their own, intra-Maghreb trade is limited.

In 2006, Morocco registered an export growth of 13.5% to Algeria, 77.3% more to Tunisia, 17% more to Libya, and 32% more to Mauritania. On the import side, Morocco imported 26.8% more from Algeria in 2006, 6.4% from Tunisia, 31.7% from Libya, and 47% from Mauritania. But while these figures may suggest booming intra-Maghreb trade, they pale in comparison to Morocco’s trade figures with their main commercial partners, most of whom are European, as well as others, including the United States, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia.

Figures kept by the United Nations note the high tariffs applied to products imported to the Maghreb, hitting 21% in North Africa for trade partners holding most-favored nation (MFN) status. This figure dwarfs that of tariffs Asia applies to its imports, at 10.8%, as well as the 9.5% in Latin America. Morocco also decreased average tariffs by 57% in recent years and 65% for maximum tariffs over a ten year period, while Algeria and Tunisia decreased their average tariffs by 20% and 30%, but these drops imply only a growth in intra-regional trade, but not at the levels which could be achieved if the countries joined under the AMU and allow the supranational body to determine trade policy.

In fact, North Africa accounts for the lowest global intra-regional trade figures at only 3%, less than one-third against the 9.5% level for the next highest, the Common Market of Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), and much below the best performing area for intra-region exports, the EU, at 70%.

On the country level, the most popular bilateral trade in North Africa is not even within the confines of francophone Maghreb, where countries with shared languages, recent history, and geographical proximity would have a natural propensity to partner and trade. Libyan-Tunisian bilateral trade characterizes the highest figures of intra-AMU bilateral trade. Equalling $750 million per year, the trade is mostly in food, manufacturing, and fuel, and to a large extent determined by Tunisia’s relatively small economy and proximity, while Libyan fuel is in abundance. The second strongest of the AMU’s bilateral relationships is that of Algeria-Egypt trade, nearing $350 million, but composed largely of Egyptian exports to Algeria.

Intra-Maghreb investment flows also remain weak as Algerian, Moroccan, and Tunisian firms find little interest in the industries of their counterparts. This dynamic is also exacerbated by Gulf petrol dollars, which continue to make their way westward in new projects, throwing their capital into the support of, primarily, housing and tourism infrastructure development, but additionally, into downstream industries and related sectors in infrastructure development.

According to Morocco’s Ministry of Economy and Finances, “the revival of the Arab Maghreb Union could constitute a powerful lever for credible partnership with the European Union and enhance the attractiveness of the region for foreign direct investment, through its positive effects on regional stability and the expansion of the market size [of 80 million consumers].” The Ministry added however that although there is “an obvious complementary between the economies of the Maghreb, intra-Maghreb economic and commercial exchanges remain weak compared to their trade with the European Union.”

With common associations with other global players, including partnerships with the EU and the entry of Algeria to the WTO, where it will join both Morocco and Tunisia, North African countries seem to be focusing on opportunities in other global neighborhoods rather than those in their own region.

Maazouz also believes Algeria’s WTO accession and the bilateral trade it should promote with Morocco, which is already a WTO member, “will contribute to the strengthening of the Arab Maghreb Union and facilitate the construction of the free trade area Maghreb.”

Natural or unnatural partners?

Beyond these basic macro economic goals and the stability all member states must achieve before they can move forward, there are also questions of the complementary regional tradition of relationships and whether separate North African states are effectively natural partners. By specializing in the same industries, Maghreb countries are effectively ruling out the complementary natures of their trading relationships. In theory, the AMU would be an effective organ, as are other trading blocs, in harnessing specialization in agricultural production, accommodating member states under a bloc in setting prices on international markets.

Instead, the lack of an effective AMU has left states to pursue their own bilateral trade policies, most of which are through EU member states as Moroccans do not need to buy Algerian fruit or Tunisian textiles when they have an industry and costs are cheaper within their own borders.

Although integration prospects remain weak, the idea is certainly merited by theoretical underpinnings, as noted by the World Bank, which maintains that an AMU-like organ could foster a two-pronged support for economic growth, including scale and competition effects as well as “hub-and-spoke” effects through the Maghreb countries’ continued trade with Europe.

The Bank believes “Maghreb integration would create a regional market of more than 75 million consumers, similar in size to many leading trading nations and sufficiently large to exploit economies of scale and make the region more attractive for foreign investment.”

Maazouz maintained that “Morocco has always integrated regional dynamics in its strategy of developing trade relationships through preferential trade agreements with the countries of the AMU.” Highlighting Tunisia as the prime case of Morocco’s regional relations he noted that, “if trade relations with Tunisia have evolved from a classical preference towards free trade in line with WTO agreements as well the vision of free trade adopted from the framework of the Barcelona process, those of other countries remained governed by conventional commercial tariff agreements.” He explained that other bilateral relations with AMU members are “pending the adoption of the proposed free-trade zone being negotiation between countries in this grouping.”

Advice for revival

The impact of business on politics was apparent for EU-watchers when the European Coal and Steel Community was to a large extent the creation of industrialists in France and Germany. If the Maghreb has any plans to revive the AMU, it could follow Europe’s example, exemplified in the calls by Morocco’s Ministry of Economy and Finances upon AMU members to “develop synergies among private partner countries.”

Recent examples of private, intra-Maghreb partnerships include the 2007 creation of the Union of Maghreb Entrepreneurs as well as temporary institutions, like a proposed think-tank aimed at strengthening the Morocco-Tunisia partnership ties. Often, ad hoc bodies, if they prove useful, are further extended or formalized.

Financial integration could be another way to ensure similar, Maghreb-wide standards in the financial services industry with the aim of facilitating export promotion and large project financing.

The IMF has recently been working on two related products: harmonizing regional payment systems and banking regulations, as well as strengthening the relationships between financial regulators and operators. According to the Ministry of Economy and Finances, “some short-term measures could be implemented and play the role of catalyst for a deeper financial integration.

“These measures would reduce the financial barriers to intra-regional trade by simplifying administrative formalities applied to the banking transactions related to trade and reduce the cost and number funding tools of trade. In addition, it is necessary to remove the stress of transport, a basic factor determinant of boosting trade”.

European Commissioner for External Affairs Benita Ferrero-Waldner believes that “a more effective functioning of the AMU would strengthen Algeria’s relations with the EU. Algerian companies would be better equipped to trade with the EU if they had the possibility to benefit from the economies of scale of the larger AMU market. In addition, the negotiating power of the AMU would certainly be stronger than that of each of its individual participating countries. By stimulating trade, a successful AMU would also underpin the structural reforms necessary for achieving faster growth.”

Maazouz is still convinced that “the Arab Maghreb Union is an important economic potential which should enable the five member countries to cope with globalization and to position itself in a strong and credible relationship vis-à-vis other regional groupings such as the European Union. Morocco remains committed to the AMU and optimistic about its future.”

As French President Nicholas Sarkozy announced plans for a Mediterranean Union and the merits for such an organization, the main question left for AMU member states is which organization they will choose first. Based on the evidence, the progress to date and a European penchant for regionalization, what is left of the AMU will most likely continue to be phased out for better options.

Mediterranean Union or the AMU?

While intra-Maghreb integration has remained stalled since its inception, losing ground against the movement of time, inter-Maghreb integration is showing progress, manifesting itself in such treaty regimes as the Agadir Accord, the Greater Arab Free Trade Area, a host of bilateral deals, and most recently the idea of a Mediterranean Union as proposed by French President Nicholas Sarkozy as a formal trading organization integrating the economies of the European Union and of those states bordering the southern rim of the Mediterranean Sea, including Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, and Libya, not to mention the economies of the Arab countries in the Eastern Mediterranean.

The formalization of an organization to supersede bilateral trading agreements remains the most likely path through which regional economic integration among the countries of North Africa will occur. Regionalizing isn’t zero-sum, in that acceding to a Mediterranean Union comes at the detriment of the AMU, but Maghreb economies will most likely still opt to associate with Europe in the short term, which will lead to a formalized partnership in the long term.

Spain, France, Italy, and others along the northern rim of the Mediterranean have long pursued strong trade policies with their southern neighbors, reflecting the benefits of a strong Euro abroad, historical trade ties, and the prospects of North African liberalization, which has presented firms with a host of off-shoring opportunities in Morocco and Tunisia.

Trade figures bolster these dynamics, denoting that 17% of Algerian exports were destined to the Italian market, 10% to Spain, 9% to France, and 4% to Belgium. On the import side, Algeria’s appetite brought 22% of the country’s total imports from France, 8.6% from Italy, 6% from Germany, and 6% from Spain. Tunisia’s figures mimic those of Algeria, with the European Union’s appetite for Tunisian exports standing at 80% of Tunisia’s total exports, while Tunisia imported 69% of their total from Europe.

More than geo-strategy

Sarkozy’s proposals for a Mediterranean Union during the 2007 French presidential elections is likely to mean more than just a pipedream driven by geo-political desires, but evidence does point to the lacunae left by Europe relative to other major economies and the relationships they maintain with their spheres of influence.

Although Zbigniew Brzezinski foresaw a growing role for France in maintaining its hold of the North African “cluster of states” in the late 1990s, there is a growing body of evidence that globalization has fostered a strong domestic position for the European Union, but without the same type of geo-strategic clout the US and China have gained. European FDI flows to Mediterranean economies remain meager, comprising only 1% of total European FDI, against 17% of the US’s FDI to Central and Latin America and 20% of Japan’s FDI to countries encompassed within their regional periphery of East Asia.

Pundits also criticize the idea of a Mediterranean Union, holding it in suspicion as a consolation prize for Turkey if the country grows tired with its seemingly endless EU accession plans, but plans to regionalize the Mediterranean could foster the sort of union needed by North Africa in any regional organization.

The idea includes plans to extend and deepen trade ties and promote cooperation in developing countries along the southern rim through institutions such as a Mediterranean Investment Bank, modeled after the European Investment Bank. Further details will likely be announced in July when Paris will host a Euro-Mediterranean summit to formally establish the Union. France’s Sarkozy is likely to partner with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who will lead the southern side of the Union from its base in Tunis.

Regional stability was addressed in a 2008 report by Morocco’s Ministry of Economy and Finances, which noted of the most detrimental threats were: “Instability in the price of petroleum for importing countries and geopolitical instability, above all for most in the countries of the southern Mediterranean, who founded their development strategies on the attraction of foreign capital and the development of tourism.

“In total, the international environment was globally favorable for the national economy in 2006. In particular, the rebound of growth in Europe, our principal commercial partner, has strongly supported foreign demand addressed to Morocco, which has evolved to a rate of 7.1% against 6% in 2005.”

Ferrero-Waldner stated in April that Morocco could play a leadership role in the Mediterranean Union, underscoring that “Morocco expressed a great political will to lead at the beginning.”

The will expressed by Morocco includes with it possibilities for enlarging cooperation with the EU, a larger liberalization of trade, political dialogue supporting neo-liberal growth theories and strong association of theory with communal foreign and defense policies.

May 1, 2008 0 comments
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Campus goes global

by Executive Staff May 1, 2008
written by Executive Staff

“The MENA region has not made the best use of its accumulated human capital, unemployment is high among graduates and the education system in the region is not fully equipped to produce graduates.” These are just two of the many damming conclusions made in a recent World Bank report, The Road Not Traveled: Education Reform in the Middle East and North Africa. The World Bank report also showed that right across the region the education system is in dire straits.

The World Bank’s Knowledge Economy Index, which incorporates the economic incentive regime, innovation, education and the information infrastructure, reveals that almost all the MENA countries fall below the middle range of the index. The highest scoring country in the MENA region was the UAE, which was below Chile and Estonia.

The Gulf countries, helped along with a large current account, have recognized the urgency of their educational situation and have put their vast surplus capital into attracting foreign educational institutions to set up in their region. This has occurred at a time when many educational institutions in Europe and America are seeing a financial need to operate much like the knowledge that they produce: globally.

Educational institutions are now being transformed from their local establishments into trans-national institutions. The names of many universities that attach them to a place — The University of Georgetown, the University of California, The London School of Economics, the London School of Business and so on — will soon lose their sense of locale as big universities are now looking to have several campuses spread throughout the globe.

The reason for this trans-nationalization of educational institutions is that both the receivers of these institutions and the institutions themselves have recognized that the world of higher education has become an international market. As Professor Tim Wilson, vice-chancellor of the University of Hertfordshire in Britain, said, “Students are increasingly seeing themselves as customers and their time at university as an investment.” Attracting students from around the globe to educational institutions in Europe and America is no longer seen as economically viable.

Internationalizing instruction

To become more competitive universities in Europe and America are now not trying to attract students from aboard to travel to them but instead the institutions themselves are going to these international students through setting up campuses throughout the world.

Wilson believes that, despite 13% of students in the UK coming from outside the EU, universities still have to become more competitive in both national and global higher education markets: “Internationalization does not just mean creating a multicultural community here in the UK on British terms. It must mean establishing a network of partners on a global basis. To be truly international universities need to do more than invite international students on to our campuses.”

The University of Hertfordshire now has a network of partners established in colleges in Malaysia, Greece, China, Singapore, Germany, Russia, Hungary the Caribbean and Canada, with this network growing each year. All these colleges “teach Hertfordshire degrees, delivering British style education.” This policy has paid off for the British institution with their international franchise income exceeding $2 million annually. 

In the Middle East, Qatar and United Arab Emirates have so far led the way in encouraging foreign institutions, similar to the University of Hertfordshire, to set up campuses in their countries. In Doha, Qatar, an initiative by the Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development created a 14 square kilometer ‘Education City’.

In ‘Education City’ five American Universities have set up campuses including Georgetown and Cornell Medical School. The financial incentives for the American and European educational institutions are sizable and obvious. The Cornell medical school has been granted $750 million over 11 years by the Qatar Foundation to spend on its campus.

However, it is also the exorbitant fees these institutions can charge that have driven so many to create campuses outside their own localities. For example, the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service in Qatar will cost a student nearly $36,000 an academic year, the same as one would pay in Georgetown.

Dubai has seen similar phenomena but is trying a slightly different approach in linking up its newly created Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) with universities. Two of the best business schools in Europe — CASS and the London Business School (LBS) — have both set up Executive MBA’s at the DIFC.

Dr. Kevin Dunseath, LBS Director in Dubai, thinks the advantage for Dubai in attracting institutions like LBS is a wider array of options for local students in terms of the courses they are able to access without the need to go abroad and also the ability of the school to attract skilled staff and retain them regionally.

The attraction Dubai held for  LBS was its location and nature as a regional business hub and also because the Dubai authorities were very welcoming and encouraging.

Some fail the grade

Dunseath pointed out that “there have been stories already of universities setting up overseas and collapsing — for instance the University of Southern Queensland in Dubai and New South Wales in Singapore.”

The collapse of these universities occurred at a great cost — financially and in terms of reputation. Hence, Dunseath cautioned “it is initially very tempting to think let’s go global and set up a campus but there are significant risks in so doing: if you dilute your brand you are finished, this is the most important thing to protect.”

The challenge to deliver the same quality of education in institutions setting up overseas campuses that match their home institution has proved to be the most difficult in the trans-nationalization of higher education institutions. “There is a lot of suspicion on behalf of our clients as to institutions that hire locally because the clients will say… it may be the same name but is it the same product? [By flying our faculty from our main base] this is our assurance that it is the same product,” Dunseath asserted.

Where to source staff from for the LBS’ operation in Dubai was also the reason that LBS set up a ‘center’ rather than a larger-scale campus, as the business school felt it was unable to ensure that it could guarantee its quality by employing locally. Dunseath emphasized that “the key for us was the maintenance and enhancement of our brand.”

Thus the MBA program that is offered is taught exclusively by LBS faculty, or, as Dunseath remarked, “It is not a fake Rolex.”

Local investors are also to be side-stepped he warned, “as the danger is that you end up with two different agendas: the academics on one side who are concerned about standards and quality and on the other hand you have the local investors who are mainly concerned with a return on investment.”

The London-Dubai Executive MBA offered by the LBS is very much a course that illustrates the changing and more mobile nature of higher education. LBS being in London has a major advantage over its North American rivals as the flight is only seven hours from Dubai to London. Subsequently, flying faculty staff from the London campus to the center in Dubai is far more feasible for British and European institutions than their American rivals.

This may be a major competitive advantage if the debate surrounding the quality of education actually delivered in these externally based institutions intensifies as their numbers continue to increase. As Dunseath attested, “this is not a local MBA program but a global one and is aimed at educating global leaders who operate around the world. Some of the students fly in every month to attend the classes in Dubai and the second half of this course is in London.”

The global nature of higher education is fully embodied by the making up of the course in which the seventy students represent thirty different countries. However, this global composition illustrates the difficulty that still lays ahead for the MENA region in increasing the skill base of its citizens, as only 35% of the course is filled by students from the Middle East and North Africa. This is a world where the local is completely taken out of higher educational facilities. Dunseath in particular was eager to stress that the London Business School had as little as possible in way of connections with local investors, local higher education institutions, locally skilled staff or even ‘local’ customers.

Adding or subtracting?

There is little doubt that institutions such as LBS and others setting up in the Middle East will benefit hugely financially and, if they are diligent, in terms of reputation as well. How much the Middle East will benefit from these institutions is yet to be seen. There is a risk that they could drown out any local efforts at educational institutional building and block those that cannot afford the fees from accessing quality higher education.

However, it is possible these institutions will stimulate higher education regionally by producing highly skilled citizens who can then drive the education system on. What is certain is if the region wants to achieve sustainable growth that is less reliant on foreign skills and outside institutions, the World Bank Knowledge Economy Index must be turned around.

May 1, 2008 0 comments
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Wheels and deals

by Executive Staff May 1, 2008
written by Executive Staff

For more than a decade the traditional car manufacturing hubs in Italy, Germany, Japan, and the United States have been challenged by a host of developing countries who are changing the business with their lower production costs and geographic proximity to burgeoning markets in Africa and Asia.

Global demand for more affordable cars, coupled with Western investment, has shifted the automobile manufacturing epicenters east. For many, India holds the future of the auto production process, denoted recently by the Tata Group’s purchase of Jaguar and Range Rover. Within the MENA region, however, it is Iran that is making the car industry headlines, as it is set to establish its own presence in Asia and abroad with its car giant Khodro, branching into new markets and demanding attention for its forays into Europe, Africa, and Asia.

Since Iran’s auto industry inception in the 1960s with the Peykan — modeled after the British Hillman Hunter — the state-owned company Khodro, along with Iran’s second largest manufacturer Saipa, have come to expand their offers and now produce licensed versions of Peugot, Hyundai, Kia, Citroen, Nissan, Renault, Dacia, and Mercedes models.

Many believe that Khodro’s biggest strength lies in the manufacturing of these licensed versions of international brands like Mercedes-Benz, with whom Khodro signed agreements to produce both heavy duty trucks and luxury cars, such as the glistening E350, which have already begun to appear in Khodro’s arsenal of product offerings.

In April 2008 Manouchehr Manteqi, Managing Director of Khodro, announced a $575 million jump in revenues, representing a growth of 83%. Iran’s production centers in Tehran, Tabriz, and Khorasan are hoping to produce 520,000, 100,000, and 30,000 cars in the coming year, respectively, to which should be added the company’s overseas plants in Venezuela, Egypt, Azerbaijan, Syria, and Belarus, which plan to add an additional output of 20,000 cars.

Khodro has looked to the Turkish market as an avenue to greater regional production, with 2004 seeing the beginning of operations to export 3,000 cars to this regional neighbor.

Manteqi points to Khodro’s presence on Turkish soil as an indicator that “Iran has met European standards,” and looking forward, Manteqi has plans for his firm “to enter the European market via the Turkish market.”

Khodro will continue to rely on its Turkish partner, MYS Automotive, with the latter’s CEO, Yigit Seskir, noting that the two firms “are still investigating the investment invitations from various regions. For starters, some 35,000 automobiles will be produced.” The total cost of the investment, according to Seskir, ranges between $95 million and $320 million.

Iran’s car production facilities are also expanding to Africa, where Khodro Diesel will export 1,400 buses to Sudan in a deal rumored to be $140 million. The Ivory Coast, Gambia, and Senegal are also on the list of potential manufacturing bases.

However, not all news is good for the Iranian industry. Political confrontation between the country’s government and the US has threatened some of Khodro’s international transactions. Earlier this year, it was reported that various Chinese banks, under pressure from the US, decided to scale down financial operations with Iran, creating a dearth of capital and hindering business between Chinese Chery Auto and Khodro.

Moving production overseas in the hopes of feeding local appetites for low cost cars has pushed Khodro to improve production standards, resulting in higher quality automobiles. As of 2007, its latest model, the Samand Soren, passed the Euro III emission standard, breaking down barriers for entrance into the European auto market. Other improvements in Iranian cars are improved engine performance and gas mileage. In fact, Manteqi hopes to offer a hybrid-engine bus by October 2008.

Further movements into overseas markets are likely to affect Khodro’s production process by manufacturing cars as cheap as possible, but ensuring adherence to international standards so cars can be exported to a range of markets.

May 1, 2008 0 comments
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Glory to the most high

by Executive Staff May 1, 2008
written by Executive Staff

Apparently the sky is not high enough for the world’s 13th richest man, Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal al-Saud. The multi-billionaire, whose fortune Forbes estimates at $20 billion, last year bought a $320 million double-decker Airbus A380 to serve as his “Flying Palace”.

Now, according to UK-based news reports, Middle East Economic Digest and al-Saud’s Kingdom Holding company website, he is looking to build a very tall building in Jeddah. Rumor has it that the tower will be a mile high. That is 1,600 meters, or just a little over one and a half kilometers. It would be more than twice the height of Burj Dubai, which is currently the tallest man-made structure on earth.

But the prince, Kingdom Holding, and the contractors and companies involved in what Kingdom Holding calls, mysteriously, “The Jeddah Project,” are keeping very quiet about it. Only a single press release on the company’s website, from September 2007, hints of the projects existence. It states the “investment value of the project is estimated at 50 billion Saudi Riyals ($13.4 billion) upon completion,” and it will include “a colossal sky scraper with a surrounding area for other facilities.”

MEED reported in February 2008 that London-based Hyder Consulting is working on a mile-high tower somewhere in the Middle East, but would not confirm where, or for whom.

And in March 2008, the British newspapers Sunday Times and the Daily Mail reported the tower is a reality, and have gone so far as to print pictures and name London-based ARUP Consulting as working on the project. When contacted about the pictures, ARUP replied that the firm is “unable to confirm that we are working on a mile-high building. However, what we can confirm is that we are not working on the building depicted by the Sunday Times and the Daily Mail.

Other firms named in the press release as consultants, contractors and designers refused comment or did not return calls, including US-based Bechtel and Pickard Chilton, and Canadian firm HOK.

How feasible is it?

Architects have proposed mile-high towers for decades. Frank Lloyd Wright designed the gigantic “Illinois” tower in 1956, but it was never built. Until now, the technology to build and operate such a structure simply was not available or too costly. But with today’s technology, and the Burj Dubai pushing the limits and dreams of both architects and wealthy Gulf rulers, what would it take to build one a mile high? David Scott, Chairman of the Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat and structural engineer and principal at ARUP, said he could talk about building a mile high tower “theoretically,” but said he was unable to comment on any specific project in Saudi Arabia. He said the biggest challenge in the construction process would be “getting materials up there.”

“Concrete would obviously be pumped up,” he said. “If you wanted to go up say two miles, you would just have different pumping stations so that you pump the concrete into another hopper, and pump it up again.”

The same technique would be used for cranes, says Peter Weismantle, Associate Director at Skidmore, Owings and Merrill and project architect and technical director on the Burj Dubai tower. He said tower cranes could be “jumped” up the building, using the structure itself for support. The construction might even “use helicopters to place specific elements at high levels.”

“In many cases, because of the great height, lifts would be accomplished in two or more stages,” he explained of the design.

But what about when the tower is complete? Is it practical or efficient to live and work in a mile-high building? How do building managers pump water to the top, and what about washing the windows?

Practical implications extreme height

To start with, designers of towers like the Burj Dubai and the current ‘tallest building’ record holder, the Tapei 101 in Taiwan, have to incorporate numerous maintenance and “mechanical” floors to service the building. Every eighth floor in the Tapei 101 is a such a “mechanical” floor. The Burj Dubai has at least 11 floors out of 160 reserved for this purpose. These floors house elevator equipment and motors, fixed window washing equipment, and water relay stations to pump water up to the higher floors.

As designers must plan for the mechanics of the building, they must also plan to efficiently get people to their destinations. Weismantle coauthored a report last year, titled Burj Dubai: An Architectural Technical Case Study, that states the tower can be likened to a “small vertical city.”

Around 20,000 people may live, work and be visiting the Burj Dubai at any given time. Thus, designers created three different entrances on different sides of the building, for different uses: one entrance for the hotel, one for residents, and one for corporate offices and tourists.  Those three “use areas” are then arranged in clusters in the building. The hotel is located on the lower floors, residences on the middle, and offices toward the top. Hence the elevator systems located at each entrance are planned to efficiently channel people to similar destinations.

And that’s where the elevator planning comes in. The Burj Dubai will have 56 elevators, and the longest elevator shaft in the world, at 500 meters, or 132 floors. But an elevator has not been invented yet that can travel the entire height of the building. The weight of the cables would be too great. Weismantle said the only way to serve all the floors of a mile-high building would be to design a “transfer system, connecting elevators serving separate sections of the building. The building [would] utilize high-speed, nonstop ‘shuttle’ elevators bringing passengers to ‘sky lobby’ floors where they transfer to ‘local’ elevators serving the floors in between.”

Another way to increase efficiency would be to install double-decker high speed elevators, which have been used in skyscrapers for years. Both Scott and Weismantle say speed is not a problem. High rise elevators can currently travel at around 10 to 18 meters per second. That means, in a straight shaft with no transfers, modern elevators can travel one mile in one minute and forty seconds to two minutes. However, to insure passenger comfort (especially to prevent uncomfortable ear popping), the elevator would need to be pressurized if traveling upwards of 12 meters per second.

Scott says elevators without cables are currently in the experimental stages, and may be available in the future if a mile high tower is built. These elevators would use magnetic levitation instead of cables. This would allow for both longer elevator shafts (because there are no cables), and could permit several elevators in the same shaft.

Blowing in the wind

A mile high tower may have more than 300 stories. Scott says wind forces would be “massive,” creating “wobbling” of the structure. This could cause people living or working on the top floors to get motion sickness. One way to dampen the wind affect is to create “outrigger” buildings that help stabilize the structure at the base. Also, at the top of the building, electronic movement sensors can be combined with a giant steel ball to dampen the affects of the wind.

The Tapei 101 addresses the “wobbling problem” with a 606 ton steel ball suspended from the 92nd floor, to counteract the wind forces. Two other 4 ton balls on the 60 meter spire act as stabilizers, and are dampened by springs at the spire’s base.

Emergency a mile high

After the tragedy at the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, architects and building designers have studied ways to evacuate buildings more rapidly. That means using elevators for evacuation, and thus certain elevators in the Burj Dubai will be insulated and reinforced to be used as “lifeboats” in an emergency. The high speed elevators would arrive at emergency evacuation points quickly, then descend with passengers, then quickly ascend again to pick up more evacuees.

According Weismantle and his colleagues’ Burj Dubai Report, the “estimated time to fully evacuate the building using stairs and ‘lifeboat’ emergency service was reduced by 46% from that of using stairs alone.” This would be one option to increase the evacuation speed on a mile-high tower.

And while the emergency procedures may never be needed, but in the dusty, humid and sun baked Gulf climate, the mile high tower will definitely need to be cleaned — and often. The Burj Dubai designers tackled this problem by placing the majority of the burden on three window cleaning “machines” running along fixed tracks on the outside of the building’s facade.

Each machine will have “jib arms” that can reach up to 36 meters, allowing it to clean windows to the left and right. Burj Dubai designers estimate it will take 6 to 8 weeks to clean the entire building — meaning a building twice that size would probably take twice as long.

The reasons for building a mile-high tower are many: to gain publicity, bragging rights and to put a city on the map. For architects and engineers like Scott, it is a chance to push the limit and achieve higher than anyone else.

“If I was lucky enough to be asked to design a building like that, I think it would be a great challenge,” he said. “And I think it certainly can be done.”

May 1, 2008 0 comments
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Calling from 30,000 ft

by Executive Staff May 1, 2008
written by Executive Staff

On March 20, 2008, the first ever authorized in-flight mobile phone call was made from an Emirates Airlines Airbus A340-300 flying at 9,000 meters from Dubai to Casablanca. Passengers were so quick to use the service that an Emirates representative on board meant to make the first call was beaten to it instead — by a matter of seconds — by two speed-dialing passengers.

Airlines in the Middle East see this kind of behavior as confirmation that they are going down the right path by installing the new in-flight mobile phone capability. Emirates has long had in-seat phones available, as have other airlines, but the prohibitive cost, at around $7 per minute, and the credit card swiping hassle made them all but an added decoration to the seat-back for many passengers. But Emirates, catering to the communication hungry business traveler, sees demand for an expanded and convenient in-flight communications package.

“Our customers are already making more than 7,000 calls a month from our in-seat phones,” said Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al-Maktoum, Emirate’s chairman and chief executive. “So we will be making life easier for those for whom staying in touch has become an important part of their everyday lives.”

Soon, anyone will be able to make and receive mobile phone calls, send text messages, check their email, and, eventually, surf the internet at cruising altitude, and from their own mobile phone, blackberry, or laptop computer. The price of a call will be about the same as a roaming international call — at the cheaper cost of around $4 per minute, according to the service providers.

The charges will appear on the passenger’s monthly mobile bill but the per-minute fee will vary, depending on the service agreement between individual mobile companies and the in-flight mobile service providers, OnAir and Aeromobile.

Aeromobile has integrated the traditional in-seat satellite phone technology, called “Inmarsat Classic Aero,” into a kind of mini mobile phone network. OnAir uses Inmarsat’s upgraded “Swiftbroadband” technology, which offers greater bandwidth and internet browsing capability. Both companies have started installing and testing the equipment after gaining approval from international transportation and communication regulators, and from mobile phone network operators.

Overcoming the technological hurdles

Until recently, the usage of mobile phones in airplanes had been banned for two reasons. First, airline regulators worried mobile phone signals could interfere with an aircraft’s navigation equipment and other sensitive onboard computers.

Second, mobile phone companies feared jets flying overhead filled with chatting passengers would jam or interfere with ground networks, resulting in dropped calls and reduced system capacity.

Now, OnAir and Aeromobile have overcome these concerns — at least enough to satisfy both transportation and communication authorities and the network owners in around 40 countries. They have done it by setting up an isolated wireless mobile network inside the aircraft.

“The analogy actually is to consider that once you get on an Aeromobile equipped aircraft, you’re actually traveling to a new country, and you’re roaming into that country — and that country can actually fly anywhere in the world, wherever that airplane goes,” said David Coiley, AeroMobile’s Vice President of External Relations.

The mini mobile network works like this: inside the cabin, a wireless mobile signal is broadcast like a wireless internet network. The network sends calls to an on-board ‘base station’ modem, where the signal is translated from GSM to Internet Protocol signals. The IP signal is then beamed from the aircraft’s satellite antenna to one of Inmarsat’s satellites. The satellite sends the call to a dedicated ground station, where the call is converted back into a GSM signal and routed to its destination. Receiving a call works in the reverse order. Coiley says the whole process takes about a quarter of a second on average.

It’s still an electronic device

The new regulations will allow mobiles to be used only above 3,000 meters, and, like all electronic devices, never during take off or landing. Passengers are told when it is safe to turn on their mobile devices by a crew announcement. When phones are switched on, they are automatically connected to the aircraft’s network and the customer is greeted with a text message. Dialing a number is the same as making an international call on the ground.

The airborne wireless network prevents mobiles from interfering with the aircraft’s computer systems, since phones emit potentially dangerous electromagnetic waves when they’re searching for a network.

And as Coiley noted, this also keeps the phones from trying to connect to ground based networks below. “It’s actually irrelevant if you’re flying over this country or that country… and irrelevant in terms of what you’re paying,” he said. “We are in this isolated country that does not interfere with the country below it in terms of communications.”

With the currently installed technology, the number of possible simultaneous calls is limited. Each base station has a channel, and on the Inmarsat Classic network, each channel can handle between six and twelve calls at the same time. Most planes will only have one channel. Even the most advanced technology, the Inmarsat SwiftBroadband system, can only handle 12 to 24 callers at once, so the entire plane will not be chatting away mid-flight.

Still restricted, but growing

Currently, one will be hard pressed to find a flight with the new technology. Emirates is only flying one aircraft with the mobile in-flight capability. Routes over Chinese and US airspace cannot use them, as those countries’ regulatory agencies have not yet approved the use of any mobile technology on aircraft.

But in the next year, one can expect to start seeing, and hearing, more mobile phones on flights around the Middle East and Europe. The European Union has cleared the way for passengers to use their mobiles in-flight, with Air France currently flying one plane using OnAir’s technology on European routes.

As the Middle East trailblazer, Emirates Airlines plans to invest $27 million dollars to fit its fleet with Aeromobile systems, which cost around $200,000 dollars each, while OnAir is also contracting with Royal Jordanian and Oman Air. In January, Kuwait-based Jazeera Airlines announced plans to equip its fleet of Airbus A320s with OnAir’s in-flight mobile technology by 2009.

“We are excited to be one of the first airlines in the world to install the technology that allows travelers to use their mobile phones during flight, “ Jazeera Chairman and CEO Marwan Boodai said in a statement. “The new service will be available to all passengers for a fee, and will empower passengers to continue communicating with their families or their office while on board.”

Jazeera’s service will “allow unlimited text messages and emails including attachments to be received and sent, and will allow up to 12 simultaneous voice calls,” the company said in a statement.

Air-phone? Air-rage

But maybe not all the passengers are as excited as Jazeera’s Chairman. According to an International Airline Passengers Association survey of 1,500 European and North American airline passengers conducted last June, 45% of respondents said that a person in the seat next to them making a call was “highly annoying,” 10% higher than a wailing infant. Only 5% said a passenger making a call in the next seat was not annoying at all.

But the Middle East may be different. According to YouGovSiraj’s MENA wide research study last November, 47% of business travelers “want complete freedom to use mobiles phones” on an airline, and “43% of leisure travelers want the same.”

Regardless of the regional passenger approval of the technology, Aeromobile and OnAir have put flight crews in direct control of the systems. Pilots can turn the network off during night flights to prevent possible conflicts between passengers who want to talk and those who want to sleep. They can also switch it into text-only mode, or data-only mode. The pre-flight announcement will also plead with passengers to turn off their ring tones by putting the phones in “silent” mode.

Having the ability to make phone calls from an airplane may encourage passengers to switch off their phones at take off and landing. Studies indicate that up to 50% of phones are left on during normal flights. Moreover, the new technology will help to limit potentially dangerous, illegal calls already taking place on flights. A Carnegie Mellon study indicated that in the US, every flight already has one to four calls being made from the aircraft.

Those illegal calls and text messages will probably continue for some time, as airlines estimate the mobile service will not be available on all aircraft until one to four years. Installing in-flight mobile phone technology takes about three days, and can be done during already scheduled aircraft inspections and repairs. 

May 1, 2008 0 comments
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Economics & Policy

Shifting gears

by Fares Saade May 1, 2008
written by Fares Saade

Fueled by demographic growth, urbanization and economic development, the cities of the Gulf Cooperation Council are growing at a rapid rate that is outpacing their current transport infrastructure and services.

The United Nations forecasts that 88 percent of the GCC will be urbanized by 2025, compared to a world average of 57 percent. What’s more, an increase in income levels will cause demand for mobility to outpace even the region’s rapid population growth.

So far, this surge in demand has been largely met by private vehicles and taxis, with public transportation accounting for less than 10 percent of all motorized trips. This approach has resulted in congestion, pollution and deteriorating road safety. It threatens to slow the growth of the region’s cities and undermine the quality of life for urban residents.

To address these challenges, authorities have been making massive investments in public transportation systems; regional governments have recently announced that they will pour a combined $26 billion into metro systems, trams and monorails. However, these investments alone will not change commuters’ habits and attract them away from cars and onto public transport. Other countries’ experience shows that careful policy formulation and planning are indispensable to the success of public transportation. For the car-dependent cities of the GCC, those lessons are particularly critical.

The path to public transport

Transport authorities must be realistic about how many people will actually use public transportation. With strong car cultures and populations spread over large areas, GCC cities will have to work hard to drag drivers out of their cars.

To reach even modest success, transport authorities must consider five critical steps. Although their implementation will vary by country, each serves a common goal: enhancing the attractiveness of public transport and dissuading individuals’ use of cars.

Focus on convenience: People will not use public transportation if it is not easy to do so, and thus public transport should first aim to be accessible. The recently opened Dubai Metro is a case in point: It is still working to reach a satisfactory and sustainable level of use with plans for “park and ride” facilities and better feeds from high-frequency bus services and taxis.

The cleanliness and comfort of stations and vehicles are also important in attracting riders from all socioeconomic brackets. Finally, fare levels and structures need to balance affordability for users with transport authorities’ goal of maximizing revenues. To offset the reduced convenience of public transportation, the cost of the trip to the customer — in both money and time — must be lower than the cost of the same trip using a car.

Integration: The easier it is for commuters to ride multiple modes — for instance, bus and metro lines — the more convenient public transport becomes.

There are two main levels of integration. The first one is at the station level; major interchange stations provide commuters with access to metro, tram, bus and taxi services. Metro stations in sparsely populated GCC cities would require strong feeders, such as buses and taxis. Fares and ticketing are the second level of integration: Allowing users to pay a single fare and use a single ticket for multiple modes is another element of convenience, particularly when the combined fare is lower than the sum of the fares on the different modes.

Smart card ticketing technology has now become the standard for many metros, as it offers users the added benefit of being able to use it for parking and various small purchases, such as newspapers and drinks.

Discourage car use: Disincentives for car use are probably the best way to encourage riders to use public transportation. Recent studies have shown that urban rail systems mostly attract riders who had previously been using the bus rather than those who had been driving — unless authorities impose severe restraints on the ownership and use of personal cars.

Such measures may include limiting car ownership (via sales taxes, import duties, and annual fees) and restricting car usage (via parking charges, congestion and road tolls, and fuel taxes). For GCC cities, the challenge is substantial. Taxing car ownership and fuel is likely to be contentious in an oil-producing region accustomed to low taxes and import duties.

The dynamic management of parking space and policies that charge for it would likely prove not only easier to implement but also be better targeted to specific congested areas of city centers. A number of cities, most notably in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, have been moving in that direction recently.

Overall, in a region where very few people use the existing bus service, restricting car usage is inevitable if public transportation is to really take off. Measures can be gradually introduced over time as public transport becomes available and convenient.

Bring in the private sector: Private- sector involvement can offer a number of benefits to GCC cities in developing or operating modes of public transport.

* The greater efficiency that characterizes private-sector operation leads to reduced government spending on subsidies for urban transportation. Other countries’ experiences show that competition for operating franchises is the primary way to reduce subsidies.

* Public-private partnerships in infrastructure projects, such as rail transport and station development, alleviate the fiscal burden on governments and facilitate the projects’ execution. There is an increasing need for better financial management of these projects as GCC governments attempt to boost their reserves and ensure fiscal discipline, despite the oil boom of the last few years.

* Private operators tend to have the discipline and much-needed customer orientation to ensure high standards of service quality, reflected in service frequency, schedule suitability, maintenance, image and staff friendliness.

Dubai Metro is a  step toward improving public transport infrastructure in the UAE

Create an enabling institutional and regulatory framework: Few of the above-mentioned policies and measures are possible without a solid and integrated framework for planning and regulation. Public accessibility, intermodal integration and disincentives for car use require well-integrated planning between the relevant government entities. Private-sector participation requires transparent and well-developed licensing, regulations and enforcement mechanisms. This is difficult in the current GCC institutional context, which remains largely fragmented and underdeveloped. Planning, regulation and enforcement responsibilities are often distributed among different uncoordinated entities with overlapping roles and responsibilities.

However, in the past few years, a growing number of countries have been establishing integrated transport authorities with a clear mandate for planning, regulating and enforcing all matters related to surface transport and traffic management. Not all countries may want to have a single entity; nonetheless, the allocation of responsibilities and the coordination mechanisms have to be well-established.

Public transportation may not be the sole remedy for the looming mobility challenges facing GCC cities, which demand a holistic approach that includes strategies for traffic management, non-motorized transport such as walking and cycling, and the integration of transport with land-use planning. But none of these strategies will dispense with the need to develop and promote the use of public transportation. Accordingly, following these vital steps to encourage public transport use will help public transportation reach its ultimate objectives.

May 1, 2008 0 comments
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