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Gov’t could hike electricity prices next month

1

What We're Tracking Today

Egypt’s third local sukuk issuance was 2x oversubscribed

Good morning, friends. We have a relatively brisk news day on our hands today, led by news of an upcoming hike to electricity prices and the budget deficit widening again.



PSA-

WEATHER- It’s another cool day in Cairo, with a high of 23°C and a low of 14°C, according to our favorite weather app.

It’s a little cooler in Alexandria, with a high of 22°C and a low of 13°C.

WATCH THIS SPACE-

#1- The General Authority for Investment and Freezones will begin a full re-engineering of investment procedures in January as part of its plan to launch a single electronic platform for all investor licensing, approvals, and follow-up services, the authority said in a statement. The digital portal will centralize permits, streamline processes, reduce human intervention, and offer investors a unified interface for interacting with government agencies.


#2- The Finance Ministry plans to auction off a total of 500k quintals of cottonseed over the next year, government sources told EnterpriseAM. The first auction will see the ministry sell around 20k quintals.

Sales will take place through the Egyptian Mercantile Exchange, the sources said. The government is preparing an incentive package to encourage companies to register on the exchange ahead of the first auction. The ministry also plans to add three more commodities to the platform next year to expand participation and attract more private-sector traders to the exchange.

The government is also working with relevant authorities to refine trading mechanisms and increase activity on the exchange, according to the sources. Efforts are underway to resolve the technical and administrative hurdles that have previously hindered trading.

FROM THE DEBT MARKETS-

The Central Bank of Egypt has sold USD 961 mn worth of one-year, USD-denominated treasury bills at an average yield of 3.75%, according to its website. The issuance was oversubscribed, receiving a total of 19 bids worth over USD 1 bn for the bank’s planned USD 950 mn offering.

AND- The Finance Ministry sold EGP 5.5 bn worth of local sovereign sukuk in its third issuance under the country’s first-ever local sukuk offering, according to official data. The three-year, EGP 4 bn ijara issuance — a leasing-based Islamic security — attracted an order book of EGP 8.2 bn from 28 bidders. The auction is one of three planned for December, with a combined value of EGP 14 bn.

REMEMBER- The strong demand follows the second sukuk issuance in mid-November, which drew bids worth nearly 11x the offering size, prompting the ministry to expand its December issuance schedule. The sukuk program aims to raise a total of EGP 200 bn by June 2026.

SMART POLICY-

The Financial Regulatory Authority has issued its first unified and comprehensive manual covering every service it provides across the non-bank financial system, according to a statement from the regulator. The authority positions the manual as a pillar of its strategy to enhance transparency, improve the business environment, and strengthen Egypt’s ability to attract domestic and foreign investment.

The authority will update the document on a rolling basis to ensure alignment with global regulatory developments, inviting all market participants to use it as the official and sole reference for dealings with the regulator.

Want to take a look yourself? You can check out the guide here.

SUKUK WATCH-

Weekly sukuk roundup: The yield to maturity on Egypt’s February 2026 sovereign sukuk rose to 7.07% on Friday, up from 6.76% the week before, according to the Egyptian Financial Company for Sovereign Taskeek’s weekly report (pdf). The sukuk traded lower at USD 100.88, compared to USD 101.03 a week earlier.

HAPPENING TODAY-

It’s day two of the Egypt Defence Expo (EDEX) at the Egypt International Exhibition Center. The event, which is running until Thursday, will showcase the latest land, sea, and air defense technologies. The event is expected to bring together over 40k visitors to check out the 450 exhibiting companies.

HAPPENING TOMORROW-

Non-oil private sector growth activity to break its eight-month streak in the red? S&P Global will release PMI figures measuring non-oil private sector activity for November tomorrow. Last month’s report came with encouraging news, with the index edging up to 49.2, 0.8 points short of the 50.0 threshold that separates growth from contraction.


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THE BIG STORY ABROAD-

European leaders reaffirmed support for Ukraine during President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s visit to Paris, where he met French President Emmanuel Macron and joined a call with other EU leaders to coordinate positions on a revised US peace. The updated plan, which is still under negotiation, follows two rounds of US-Ukrainian talks and is expected to be reviewed in Moscow this week, where Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff will brief Russian President Vladimir Putin. (Reuters | New York Times | BBC | France24)

AND IN BUSINESS NEWS- Global stocks and cryptocurrencies fell yesterday as investors turned cautious ahead of key US economic data and the Federal Reserve’s 10 December policy meeting. The sell-off followed weeks of volatility driven by concerns over AI stock valuations and uncertainty about the economic outlook. (Financial Times | Reuters | Bloomberg)

ALSO- OpenAI has acquired a stake in Thrive Holdings, a private equity firm set up by top OpenAI backer Thrive Capital, in a new agreement that deepens the AI company’s ties with its investors and partners. The arrangement gives OpenAI a “meaningful” share in Thrive Holdings — which acquires and modernizes service firms like accounting and IT providers using AI. (Financial Times | Reuters | Bloomberg | CNBC | New York Times)

*** It’s Going Green day — your weekly briefing of all things green in Egypt: EnterpriseAM’s green economy vertical focuses each Tuesday on the business of renewable energy and sustainable practices in Egypt, everything from solar and wind energy through to water, waste management, sustainable building practices and how you can make your business greener, whatever the sector.

In today’s issue: We look at how while AI is straining global energy systems, it may also be opening a new pathway to create more sustainable energy systems.

ATP tennis returns to Egypt after 15 years: Somabay to host the Somabay Open – ATP Challenger 50 With the Somabay Open – ATP Challenger 50, Somabay once again steps into the spotlight of international tennis. From 17 to 23 November 2025, professional players from around the world will gather on Egypt’s Red Sea coast for a tournament that marks the next milestone in the destination’s sporting evolution.

2

Energy

Egypt eyes January electricity price hike as inflation outlook improves

The Madbouly government is preparing to introduce new electricity price hikes starting January, as the Electricity Ministry reviews updated pricing scenarios, a senior government official told EnterpriseAM.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

The proposed price hikes are expected to range between 15-25%, depending on consumption brackets, in an effort to close the gap between production costs and its end price, our source told us.

Since August last year, electricity price hikes have been put on hold, with the government prioritizing lower inflation and subsequent rate cuts over cutting down its energy subsidy bill.

But with the outlook on inflation more positive, the government is returning to its plan to bring down its energy bill, our source told us. After October’s fuel price hike, it’s now electricity’s turn — and not coincidentally coming shortly after the wrapping of the ongoing IMF mission’s visit to the country, which policymakers hope will lead to the final sign-off on our combined fifth and sixth reviews.

As things stand: Electricity prices are currently being evaluated in light of exchange rates and global energy prices before being submitted to the cabinet for approval, according to the source.

The Oil Ministry is working on securing the needed supplies of natural gas and mazut for the sector, contributing to the steady operation of the national grid. Still, rising oil prices and greater reliance on mazut have added financial pressure on the state, with at least EGP 0.20 in additional production costs per kilowatt, our source said. The electricity sector currently consumes around 3.3 bn cubic feet of natural gas per day.

REFRESHER- The government allocated EGP 75 bn for electricity subsidies this fiscal year, marking a substantial increase from the EGP 2.5 bn allocated the year before.

The plan to phase out electricity subsidies and move to a free electricity market remains in place, but the timeline for a full phase-out of electricity subsidies remains unclear, according to our source. Higher-consumption segments already pay cost-reflective prices, while lower tiers continue to receive government support. The eventual liberalization of the electricity market will allow the state to continue supporting low-income consumers while scrapping subsidies for high-consumption brackets.

Looking ahead: Egypt’s accelerated expansion of low-cost renewable energy is expected to ease the scale of future electricity price increases and allow the sector to reach cost recovery without more increases next fiscal year.

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3

Economy

Egypt’s budget deficit widens to 3.2% of GDP in first four months of FY 2025-26

The country’s budget deficit widened to 3.2% of GDP during the first four months of the current fiscal year, up from 2.6% during the same period last fiscal year, according to a Finance Ministry report seen by EnterpriseAM.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

The primary surplus surges: The primary surplus — which excludes interest payments — jumped over 81% y-o-y to record EGP 236.8 bn, equivalent to 1.1% of GDP. The ministry attributed the uptick to greater tax revenues alongside greater fiscal discipline.

REMEMBER- The FY 2025-26 budget pencils in a 4.0% primary surplus, up from 3.5% last fiscal year. The budget also sees the overall deficit narrowing to 7.3% of GDP, from last year’s 7.6%, before falling further to 5.5% in FY 2026-2027.

However, some are a little more optimistic: Fitch Solutions’ research unit BMI expects the budget deficit to shrink to 6.6% of GDP during this fiscal year, and to 6.1% of GDP in the following fiscal year. The World Bank sees the deficit reaching 6.7% in the current fiscal year, while BNP Paribas expects the deficit to reach 6.0% of GDP in FY 2026-27.

Total revenues rose to EGP 863.9 bn during the four-month period, marking a 33.3% y-o-y increase, supported by a 35% y-o-y increase in tax revenues, which came in at EGP 756.7 bn, amid improved relations with the business community and economic activity recovery, according to the report. The state budget penciled in a 23% y-o-y jump in public revenues to EGP 3.1 tn.

In contrast, spending increased 37.3% y-o-y to EGP 1.5 tn during the four-month period, with interest payments accounting for the lion’s share, coming in at EGP 899 bn. The Finance Ministry seeks to distribute the burden of interest payments over the entire fiscal year.

4

Capital markets

EGX gains 6.5% in November, with defensives driving the growth

EGX records yet another month of gains: The EGX30 climbed 6.5% in November to close at 40.8k, according to the EGX’s latest monthly report (pdf). The gauge traded between a high of 41.4k and a low of 38k during the month, underperforming the EGX33 Shariah Index, which advanced nearly 10.0% over the same period. Total market capitalization was up 4.0% to EGP 2.9 tn.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

Turnover cooled again in November despite a pickup in trading activity: Total value traded on the EGX slipped to EGP 1.55 tn in November from EGP 1.65 tn a month earlier, even as volumes climbed sharply to 47 bn securities from 40.1 bn in October. The number of transactions also rose to 3.1 mn, up from 2.8 mn in the previous month. Stocks accounted for 10.4% of main-market turnover in November, with bonds and bills continuing to dominate at 89.6% of total trading value.

Defensives stayed in the lead: Education services once again topped the market, jumping 25.4%, followed by building materials (18.0%) and IT, media & communications (13.7%). Real estate (12.9%) and contracting & construction engineering (9.7%) also posted solid gains. On the flipside, travel & leisure lagged the market with a 7.7% drop, followed by textiles & durables (-5.7%), basic resources (-4.7%) and healthcare & pharma (-4.5%). Food, beverages & tobacco (-1.7%), trade & distributors (-3.6%) and shipping & transportation services (-0.6%) also closed the month in the red.

Net flows flipped: Local institutions were the only institutional net buyers in November (excluding block trades), recording inflows of EGP 2.32 bn, while regional institutions and foreign institutions booked net outflows of EGP 229 mn and EGP 1.2 bn, respectively. On the retail side, foreign individuals were the only net buyers, posting a modest EGP 35 mn inflow. Local and regional retail investors both ended the month in the red, selling EGP 524 mn and EGP 423 mn, respectively.

How we’re faring against regional peers: The EGX’s benchmark index outperformed Saudi’s TASI which shed 9.1% in November on liquidity pressures, as well as both Abu Dhabi’s ADX (-2.8%) and Dubai’s DFM (-3.0%).

BROKERAGE LEAGUE TABLE-

In November: EFG’s two brokerage arms topped the EGX brokerage league table (pdf) last month with a combined market share of 21.6%, followed by Thndr (9.6%) and CI Capital (7.3%).

YTD, EFG’s two brokerages retained the top spot with a 20.9% market share, beating Thndr (8%) and Mubasher (7.1%), according to the bourse’s ranking (pdf) which tracked firms’ performance between January and November.

5

Startup watch

Rology closes seven-figure growth round to scale AI-powered teleradiology across MEA

Cairo-based healthtech startup Rology has closed a seven-figure USD growth round, which saw participation from the Philips Foundation, Johnson & Johnson Impact Ventures, Sanofi Global Health Unit’s Impact Fund, and MIT Solve Innovation Future, according to a company statement (pdf). The fresh funds will allow the company to expand its AI-powered teleradiology platform across the Middle East and Africa.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

About Rology: The startup — founded in 2017 — operates an AI-assisted teleradiology platform that helps hospitals and clinics access fast, high-quality radiology reports. Rology has so far delivered 1.3 mn radiology reports to more than 300 hospitals in 13 countries, serving both public and private institutions with a network of over 200 radiologists.

Where's the money’s going? The fresh funds will be used to deepen operations in Egypt, Kenya, and Saudi Arabia, and expand into Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, the US, and other African and Asian markets, co-founder and CEO Amr Abodraiaa told EnterpriseAM.

Why MEA? Abodraiaa told EnterpriseAM that its focus on MEA stems from the region’s acute diagnostic need, where shortages of qualified radiologists and long reporting delays remain widespread. He added that the region’s regulatory environment is more conducive to cross-border teleradiology services than in Europe or the US, making its model both scalable and impactful.

The funds will also help the startup develop its tools: “The new funds will accelerate the development of additional AI tools, building on our existing suite of 8 AI-built-in models already in use. We are expanding our work on automated, grounded reporting models using AI — including LLMs, foundation models, and agentic AI — as well as multimodal diagnostic tools and workflow optimization technologies,” Abodraiaa added. These developments will allow radiologists to work faster and with higher accuracy, he explained.

What’s next? Rology aims to evolve into a borderless, AI-enabled diagnostic infrastructure that hospitals worldwide can integrate into their systems, providing high-quality radiology reports within minutes regardless of location or available resources. Its growth strategy will focus on expanding its radiologist network, scaling automated AI reporting, digitizing market-access framework, and strengthening integration with national health systems, Abodraiaa said.

6

Also on our Radar

JTI to add a new EUR 5 mn cigarette production line to its Egypt operations next quarter

MANUFACTURING-

#1- Japan Tobacco International (JTI) plans to invest up to EUR 5 mn to add a new cigarette production line in 1Q 2026 as part of its expansion strategy, General Manager Mariana Salib told Asharq Business. The company is negotiating with the General Authority for Investment and Freezones to acquire land adjacent to the Nakhla Tobacco Company to expand production for export.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)


#2- The Arab Organization for Industrialization (AOI) signed an MoU with China’s Norinco to manufacture defense systems, aiming to localize technology and expand local production capabilities, according to a statement.

EXPANSION

Agricultural commodities outfit Cairo 3A is heading into the Iraqi market after signing an MoU with IVI Holding Limited to develop an integrated poultry project in Baghdad — marking the start of what both sides describe as a long-term strategic partnership, according to a statement seen by EnterpriseAM. The first phase will see USD 160 mn invested over five years to build out the full poultry value chain, from feed and broiler production to processing, with the aim of boosting food security, creating jobs, and supplying high-quality products to the local market.

FINTECH-

Cairo-born investment platform Thndr has obtained asset-management and portfolio-management licenses from the Financial Regulatory Authority, which the company says will clear the way for it to design and directly manage its own retail investment products rather than rely solely on institutional managers, the company said in a statement (pdf).

What's next? With the new licenses in hand, Thndr will begin rolling out its own line of low-cost, digitally managed funds starting 2026 — built specifically for retail users seeking simple, goal-based investment tools.

REAL ESTATE-

Madinet Masr tapped Group Construction to build EGP 1.2 bn worth of homes in its Sarai mixed-use project in East Cairo, the developer said in a statement (pdf). Group Construction will build 80 residential buildings in Sarai’s Rai Views project, with work slated for completion by the end of 2027.

ENERGY-

Ireland’s Azorom will determine the cost of power exchanged under the Egypt–Saudi Arabia electricity interconnection project, after being selected for the talk by the Electricity Ministry, Asharq Business reports, citing an unnamed official. The study is expected to take about six months, with results to be reviewed by both countries before finalizing the pricing. The official agreement with Azorom is set to be signed before the end of December.

AVIATION-

The Arab Organization for Industrialization signed seven agreements with Abu Dhabi Aviation Group and its subsidiaries, according to a statement. The agreements cover joint manufacturing in the aviation sector, industrial and marketing integration, as well as technical, logistical, and maintenance services.

7

PLANET FINANCE

UBS sees upside for US stocks next year as China stabilizes and commodity demand strengthens

A clearer macro backdrop, falling inflation, and steady earnings growth could set up a stronger year for global markets in 2026, according to UBS’s latest Year Ahead outlook. The bank expects global equities to rise by around 15% through next year, led by resilient corporate profitability and long-term investment themes such as AI-driven power demand, healthcare innovation, and the energy transition.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

The US is still the engine of global equity returns, says UBS, which anchors its 2026 outlook in the US, where strong earnings momentum — including a prediction the S&P 500’s earnings per share will rise 10% y-o-y to USD 305 — supports the bank’s call that the index could reach 7.7k by year-end. The Magnificent 7 remain central to that view, with UBS estimating that the group will contribute nearly half of earnings growth next year as AI adoption, higher corporate investment, and supportive policy continue to drive profitability.

UBS also flags several sectors that it thinks are entering stronger phases. Healthcare stands out thanks to policy stability and the continued boom in obesity meds. Utilities are poised to benefit from rising power demand tied to AI infrastructure, while their valuations remain at an 18% reduction from historical averages. Banks are expected to deliver more stable returns, with sector-wide return on equity rising toward 11.5% and balance sheets still looking solid.

Europe also shows encouraging signs. UBS upgraded Europe to “Attractive,” pointing to a sharper earnings rebound — predicted to be up 7% y-o-y in 2026 and 18% y-o-y in 2027 — and cheaper valuations, with equities still trading at a 22% reduction from historical norms. Easier financial conditions after 200 bps of European Central Bank cuts and Germany’s investment plans also strengthen the case.

Investors should also look towards emerging markets, with UBS highlighting emerging markets as offering a way to get diverse exposure to AI and semiconductors outside of the US, as tech now makes up over 40% of the MSCI EM index. Fed easing and a softer USD should help deliver “high single-digit” returns by end-2026, according to the lender.

China’s improvements in tech innovation, stronger domestic liquidity, and resilient earnings have set the stage for further upside. Valuations are above historical averages, but remain well below prior cycle peaks, leaving room for expansion as fundamentals improve. Policy continues to favor advanced manufacturing and technology under the Five-Year Plan, while rising domestic investor participation is adding support. UBS sees US-China tensions as a source of volatility — but also as a chance to add exposure on dips.

Commodities are another bright spot in the 2026 outlook. UBS expects attractive returns across major commodity groups due to tightening supply-demand balances and ongoing geopolitical risk. In precious metals, the bank sees continued upside supported by persistent official-sector buying, fiscal uncertainty, and global risk hedging. In energy, 2025 underperformance sets up a rebound once non-OPEC+ supply growth slows and demand recovers through mid-2026. Industrial metals — led by copper — should benefit from structural shortages tied to the energy transition and recent supply disruptions. Agriculture, which slumped through 2025, becomes more appealing next year as tight cocoa and coffee markets, weather risks, and low livestock inventories support prices.

The bank recommends maintaining 30-70% of portfolios in equities depending on risk appetite, with the US representing at least half of any global allocation. Up to 30% of equity exposure can be dedicated to long-term themes like AI infrastructure, health-span innovation, and decarbonization. Commodities may play a tactical role of up to 5% in diversified portfolios, while factor-based and systematic strategies can complement regional positioning.

MARKETS THIS MORNING-

Asian markets are mostly in the green in early trading this morning, with the Kospi leading gains, up 1.6%, and the Nikkei and Hang Seng trailing behind.

EGX30

40,694

-0.2% (YTD: +36.8%)

USD (CBE)

Buy 47.46

Sell 47.60

USD (CIB)

Buy 47.49

Sell 47.59

Interest rates (CBE)

21.00% deposit

22.00% lending

Tadawul

10,543

-0.5% (YTD: -12.4%)

ADX

9,747

+0.4% (YTD: +3.5%)

DFM

5,837

+0.4% (YTD: +13.2%)

S&P 500

6,813

-0.5% (YTD: +15.8%)

FTSE 100

9,703

-0.2% (YTD: +18.7%)

Euro Stoxx 50

5,667

0.0% (YTD: +15.8%)

Brent crude

USD 63.27

+0.2%

Natural gas (Nymex)

USD 4.89

-0.6%

Gold

USD 4,236

-0.9%

BTC

USD 86,604

-0.7% (YTD: -7.5%)

S&P Egypt Sovereign Bond Index

972.47

+0.2% (YTD: +25.1%)

S&P MENA Bond & Sukuk

152.33

-0.1% (YTD: +8.9%)

VIX (Volatility Index)

17.24

+5.4% (YTD: -0.6%)

THE CLOSING BELL-

The EGX30 fell 0.2% at yesterday’s close on turnover of EGP 7.7 bn (52.7% above the 90-day average). International investors were the sole net sellers. The index is up 36.8% YTD.

In the green: Qalaa Holdings (+10.6%), ADIB (+4.4%), and Beltone Holding (+2.8%).

In the red: Telecom Egypt (-2.1%), GB Corp (-1.6%), and Palm Hills Developments (-1.6%).

8

Going Green

AI is straining global energy systems — but also opening a new pathway for sustainability

Artificial intelligence is expected to double global energy demand, but it may also simultaneously become one of the world’s most powerful tools for efficiency and emissions reduction, members of a panel hosted by the El Sewedy University of Technology and attended by EnterpriseAM said last week. Under the theme AI and Energy: Two Sides of the Same Coin?, academics, energy companies, and tech players discussed the delicate balance Egypt, like many other countries, is trying to understand between AI’s energy-intensive nature and the ways in which it can support greening the economy.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

AI demand is rewriting global power-consumption curves. The session opened with projections from the International Energy Agency showing that electricity consumption by data centers could quadruple by 2030 — driven by the explosive rise of AI models and the scale of data required to run them. Meanwhile, the AI market itself is expanding at breakneck speed, expected to jump from some USD 137 bn in 2022 to USD 1.8 tn by 2030. This simultaneous surge in energy demand and AI deployment creates — as participants put it — an environmental and regulatory challenge with no precedent.

But can AI offset the energy surge it creates? AI will unavoidably increase electricity consumption at a drastic rate, but it can also optimize renewable-energy use through load forecasting, demand scheduling, and improving performance across factories and urban buildings, said Elsewedy Electric Group Chief AI and Data Officer Hazem Shatila. The environmental paradox, he added, is striking: AI consumes enormous amounts of energy, yet it is also one of the key solutions to reducing it. AI systems can forecast solar and wind output, manage smart grids in real time, minimize losses and leakages, and improve efficiency in heavy industries — even extending asset lifetimes through predictive maintenance. “This ecosystem makes AI one of the most important emerging tools supporting the green transition,” Shatila said.

A single data center running AI models can consume as much electricity as 10 aluminum smelting plants, said Elsewedy Electric Senior Vice President Wael Hamdy. In just three years, he noted, GCC nations are seeing a surge in new power generation capacity equivalent to what was built over the past 25 years, largely due to the boom in data centers and cloud computing.

This concentration of demand raises intertwined engineering and environmental challenges. How do we generate this much electricity sustainably? How do we manage it efficiently within limited spatial footprints? And how do we build flexible generation capacity that can adapt to second-by-second load variations? Elsewedy Electric has been preparing by expanding smart-grid systems, deploying high-efficiency power technologies, and investing in joint research on boosting plant performance, Hamdy said.

Still, the human factor will make or break the transition. Behavioral change inside institutions, participants agreed, is the launchpad for any green transformation. Some 70% of AI projects in industry fail — not because of technology, but because of resistance to change, Shatila said. Transformation, he argued, starts with AI adoption before AI transformation. Universities face the same barrier, said El Sewedy University of Technology President Ahmed Youssef. “Fear of the new is the core obstacle. Overcoming that fear only happens through knowledge and hands-on practice,” he said.

And here, the academic and environmental missions intersect — raising environmental and technological awareness, training talent to manage technology responsibly, embedding sustainability and AI concepts into curricula, and building students’ decision-making and critical-analysis skills. Cooperation between El Sewedy University of Technology, Politecnico di Milano, Elsewedy Electric, and Enppi is not a traditional academic partnership, but a model for designing programs directly tied to real energy and technology needs, according to the participants.

This approach is also a vehicle for transferring industrial know-how to students early, supporting applied research in energy efficiency and smart-grid systems, and developing local solutions to industrial energy-consumption challenges. Youssef noted that private-sector partners assign first-year students real engineering projects, while the university runs applied research to enhance cable and generator performance, and offers short technical-training programs for the energy and AI sectors.

Scientific diplomacy is becoming an important driver of regional and international partnerships that support innovation in renewables and energy efficiency, said UNESCO chair of energy for sustainable development and Politecnico di Milano Rector's Delegate to Science Diplomacy Emanuela Colombo. Europe and Africa, she noted, have jointly identified AI and energy as strategic priorities for the coming years.

The need to develop clear governance frameworks for AI use in energy was also highlighted, including setting energy-efficiency standards for data centers, limiting the environmental footprint of large-scale AI training, assessing the carbon impact of every application, and regulating the relationship between companies and consumers to ensure energy justice, transparency, and ethical responsibility in model design.

Future energy leaders must now speak the language of tech, said Enppi Training and Development General Manager Manal Soliman. This will require new skill sets, including deep understanding of digital technologies, the ability to make data-driven decisions, and the capacity to manage institutional transformation while balancing operational needs with energy-efficiency goals, he explained.

Egypt’s energy future is inseparable from AI. The discussion made clear that Egypt is standing at a pivotal moment — global energy demand is rising due to AI, industries are transforming, universities are rebuilding curricula, and the private sector is investing in smarter, more efficient energy solutions. Sustainability, participants concluded, will not be achieved by energy systems alone nor by technology alone, but through a fully integrated interaction between the two, led by a new generation of engineers, researchers, and innovators.

Today’s moment is one of possibility, not fear, said the participants. They urged young people to embrace challenges, view failure as an essential part of learning and innovation, and recognize their unique readiness to engage with emerging technologies. They also underscored the importance of preserving language and identity as anchors that no technology can replace. The session ended with a call for students to lift their ambitions beyond what previous generations achieved — to become leaders of the green transition and builders of the future.


DECEMBER

1-4 December (Monday-Thursday): Egypt Defence Expo, Egypt International Exhibition Center.

1-12 December (Monday-Friday): IMF mission for extended fund facility program reviews.

3 December (Wednesday): S&P Global to release PMI figures for November.

4-7 December (Thursday-Sunday): Egy Stitch & Tex Expo 2025, Cairo International Conference Center.

6 December (Saturday): International Procurement Supply Chain Conference, Cairo, Egypt.

10 December (Wednesday): Capmas to release inflation data for November.

15 December (Monday): Neo Gen PropTech and Sustainable Smart Cities Conference, The St. Regis Hotel New Capital

25 December: (Thursday): Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

2H 2025: Potential visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping to Egypt

4Q 2025: The beginning of construction works on China’s State Grid two solar projects.

4Q 2025: GB Auto starts assembling one of China’s Great Wall Motor models in 4Q 2025.

4Q 2025-1Q 2026: Kasrawy Group to launch first Avatr EV models in Egypt.

2025: The InterAcademy Partnership assembly.

2025: Nile Basin States Summit, Cairo, Egypt.

2025: Release of the government’s Startup Charter document.

Before 2025-end: The government will launch two ro-ro shipping lines with Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

2026

JANUARY

1 January (Thursday): European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) to fully come into effect.

7 January (Wednesday): Coptic Christmas.

25 January (Sunday): Revolution Day / Police Day.

FEBRUARY

10-12 February (Tuesday-Thursday): Gitex Global’s AI Everything Middle East & Africa Summit

19 February (Thursday): First day of Ramadan (TBC).

MARCH

15 March (Sunday): IMF to hold its seventh review of Egypt’s USD 8 bn EFF arrangement.

21 March: (Saturday): Eid El Fitr starts (TBC).

30 March - 1 April (Monday-Wednesday): Egypt International Energy Conference and Exhibition 2026 (EGYPES)

APRIL

12 April (Sunday): Coptic Easter.

25 April (Saturday): Sinai Liberation Day.

MAY

1 May (Friday): Labor Day.

27-29 May (Wednesday-Friday): Eid El Adha (TBC).

JUNE:

30 June (Tuesday): National holiday in observance of June 30 Revolution (TBC).

JULY

23 July (Thursday): National holiday in observance of Revolution Day (TBC).

AUGUST

26 August (Wednesday): National holiday in observance of Prophet Muhammad’s birthday (TBC).

SEPTEMBER

15 September (Tuesday): IMF to hold its eighth review of Egypt’s USD 8 bn EFF arrangement.

27-29 September (Sunday-Tuesday): Egypt will host the fourth edition of the Global Conference on Population, Health and Human Development.

OCTOBER

6 October (Tuesday): Armed Forces Day.

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

Early 2026: Passenger operations on the New Administrative Capital–Nasr City monorail scheduled to begin.

1Q 2026: Trial operations for the Ain Sokhna–Sixth of October section of Egypt’s first high-speed rail line scheduled to begin.

May 2026: End of extension for developers on 15% interest rates for land installment payments

2H 2026: Operations at Deli Glass Co’s new USD 70 mn glassware factory kick off.

2027

20 January-7 February: Egypt to host the African Games.

April 2027: Tenth of Ramadan dry port and logistics hub to begin operations.

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

2027: Egypt to host EBRD’s annual meetings for 2027.

2027: Egypt-EU Summit 2027

End of 2027: Trial operations at the Dabaa nuclear power plant expected to take place.

September 2028: First unit of the Dabaa nuclear power plant begins operations.

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