Nejib Zaafrani, the secretary general and chief executive of the Dubai Supreme Council of Energy.
Nejib Zaafrani, the secretary general and chief executive of the Dubai Supreme Council of Energy.
Nejib Zaafrani, the secretary general and chief executive of the Dubai Supreme Council of Energy.
Nejib Zaafrani, the secretary general and chief executive of the Dubai Supreme Council of Energy.

Call for unity on MENA energy


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MENA region states should co-operate to develop energy infrastructure as they seek to meet the region's increasing demand for oil, gas and electricity, says a senior Dubai energy official.

Nejib Zaafrani, the secretary general and chief executive of the Dubai Supreme Council of Energy, said the region should meet the challenge of supplying energy to its rapidly expanding population by using it as an opportunity to work together on "visionary" projects.

"Energy is at the core," Mr Zaafrani said yesterday at the World Economic Forum summit in Dubai during a public debate on energy security.

Mr Zaafrani, a Tunisian national, proposed that the governments of MENA states should consider addressing large, intra-regional disparities in domestic gas supply with a pipeline network linking the Maghreb to the Gulf region.

Currently, the only international gas pipelines linking Arab states in the Middle East are the Pan-Arab pipeline from Egypt to Jordan and Syria and the Dolphin Energy pipeline from Qatar to the UAE.

Additional pipelines have been built to carry gas to Europe from the north African exporters Algeria and Libya.

Those states are also expanding their coastal pipeline systems as new gasfields are brought into production and gas demand from domestic users rises.

"You could make interconnectivity between the north African pipelines to trigger the thought of a regional network," Mr Zaafrani suggested on the sidelines of the meeting.

Such a project would then require high-level, government-to-government discussions and leadership initiatives to carry it forward, he added.

Mr Zaafrani also urged regional co-operation on nuclear development and suggested Abu Dhabi's nuclear programme could act as a catalyst due to the high standards established.

"They have been called the 'golden standards' and it is good to hear that because golden standards are all about safety," he told the forum.

"I think the best in the world has been brought into these standards."

Governments in the MENA region should carefully consider and consult each other on whether each state needs its own nuclear programme, Mr Zaafrani said.

A more efficient deployment of joint resources might be for some to act as regional centres of excellence for nuclear expertise while exporting electricity to their neighbours.

Tightening the screw on rogue recruiters

The UAE overhauled the procedure to recruit housemaids and domestic workers with a law in 2017 to protect low-income labour from being exploited.

 Only recruitment companies authorised by the government are permitted as part of Tadbeer, a network of labour ministry-regulated centres.

A contract must be drawn up for domestic workers, the wages and job offer clearly stating the nature of work.

The contract stating the wages, work entailed and accommodation must be sent to the employee in their home country before they depart for the UAE.

The contract will be signed by the employer and employee when the domestic worker arrives in the UAE.

Only recruitment agencies registered with the ministry can undertake recruitment and employment applications for domestic workers.

Penalties for illegal recruitment in the UAE include fines of up to Dh100,000 and imprisonment

But agents not authorised by the government sidestep the law by illegally getting women into the country on visit visas.

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