UAE’s Abu Dhabi sees strong industrial sector growth amid diversification push

    • Abu Dhabi, which constitutes about half the UAE’s industrial sector, wants to increase this to 171 billion dirhams by 2031.
    • Abu Dhabi, which constitutes about half the UAE’s industrial sector, wants to increase this to 171 billion dirhams by 2031. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Wed, Jul 19, 2023 · 08:51 PM

    ABU Dhabi, the capital of major oil exporter United Arab Emirates, plans to double the contribution from its industrial sector to GDP, a senior government official said on Wednesday (Jul 19), amid growing regional competition to diversify from oil.

    Last year, the industrial sector’s contribution to Abu Dhabi’s gross domestic product grew 9.7 per cent year-on-year to 90.8 billion dirhams (S$32.8 billion), according to government statistics shared with Reuters on Wednesday, or 16.4 per cent of its non-oil GDP and just over 8 per cent of total GDP.

    Abu Dhabi, which constitutes about half the UAE’s industrial sector, wants to increase this to 171 billion dirhams by 2031.

    “Oil is important to us in Abu Dhabi,” Rashed Al Blooshi, undersecretary at Abu Dhabi’s Department of Economic Development, told Reuters.

    “But investing in non-oil sectors will have a bigger impact on the GDP ... and we will sustain the growth.”

    Since 2021, the UAE has also established a strategy of negotiating bilateral trade agreements with a key aim to boost non-oil exports to global markets.

    In the first quarter, 27 new manufacturing operations got underway in Abu Dhabi, beating an internal target of 18, Blooshi said, adding the government wants 90 more in 2023 and another 100 by 2024.

    Abu Dhabi holds the majority of the UAE’s oil wealth, but Dubai, its more flamboyant neighbouring emirate, is considered the region’s commercial, financial and tourism hub. The two sometimes compete, while a deepening UAE-Saudi economic rivalry simmers.

    Abu Dhabi’s non-oil GDP grew 6.1 per cent in the first quarter, according to data from the statistics authority, outperforming overall GDP growth of 3.9 per cent as lower oil prices weighed. Average growth in the six-member Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) bloc is expected to slow significantly to 1.5 per cent in 2023 on lower oil prices, according to a Reuters poll on Wednesday, but the UAE economy is forecast to outperform at 2.8 per cent. REUTERS

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