Friday, November 7

Qatari Diar, the real estate arm of Doha’s sovereign wealth fund, will invest $29.7 billion in a luxury development including golf courses and marinas on Egypt’s Mediterranean coast, a source with direct knowledge said on Wednesday.The development aims to turn Alam Al-Roum, an undeveloped 7-km (4.4 mile) stretch of coastline 480 km northwest of Cairo, into a year-round destination that will attract tourists and will also have luxury neighbourhoods, schools, universities and government facilities.

Egypt has for years been pushing to secure foreign investments, especially from wealthy Gulf states, as it seeks to tackle heavy foreign debts and a gaping budget deficit.The development would be the largest Qatari investment in the country since diplomatic relations were restored following the 2017–2021 economic rift when Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain cut ties with Qatar, accusing it of supporting terrorism and aligning too closely with Iran, charges Doha denied.

The agreement with Egypt’s New Urban Communities Authority includes a payment of $3.5 billion for the land and an in-kind investment of $26.2 billion to build the project that will cover an area of 1,985 hectares (4,900 acres), the source said.A communications company that represents Qatari Diar did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for confirmation or comment.The Egyptian government said in an invitation to reporters that Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly would witness on Thursday the signing of an Egyptian-Qatari partnership deal to develop the “Similla and Alam Al-Roum” area in Matrouh province.

The deal, part of a broader $7.5 billion investment pledge Doha made this year, could help unlock around $2.5 billion in disbursements under an $8 billion financial support package that Egypt signed with the International Monetary Fund in March 2024.The lack of a Qatari investment that Egypt had promised the IMF would materialise by June was the main reason the IMF held up disbursements under the biannual review, two financial sources said.

The Qatari investment is seen as a strategic counterpart to the United Arab Emirates’ Ras El-Hekma development and part of Egypt’s broader push to attract Gulf capital to its North Coast and position the region as a Mediterranean tourism and investment hub.

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version