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Oman to develop a new LNG railway in South Sharqiyah.

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What we're tracking today

TODAY: Oman ramps up LNG supply + Flynas increases Airbus order book

Good morning, friends. It’s a busy morning on the regional logistics front with lots of news to delve into across several subsectors of the industry, but we have some news to share from our neck of the woods…

Are you planning to be in Egypt on 24 September? You may be interested in attending our 2024 Enterprise Finance Forum. Seating is strictly limited at our flagship, invitation-only forum for C-suite executives and other senior leaders.

Why attend? We’re in the early days of a generational realignment of power in our industry — in our region and beyond — and on the cusp of the biggest intergenerational transfer of wealth the world has ever seen. With that as the backdrop, we’re going to take stock of where we stand six months after the float of the EGP and ask what’s next for finance in Egypt and the wider region. Among the questions we’ll be asking:

  • What roles will Egypt, Saudi and the UAE play in the regional industry going forward?
  • What are foreign investors looking for right now?
  • Is real estate the only asset class in Egypt?
  • What does the next generation of leaders think as they take over established family businesses?

Do you want to request an invitation? Tap or click the image below.

THE BIG LOGISTICS STORY- Climate activists caused major disruption at German airports over the weekend: Around 140 flights were canceled on Thursday after climate activists from climate protest group Letzte Generation blocked Frankfurt airport runways to protest fossil fuels. The disruption at Germany’s busiest airport lasted two hours but delays were made for the remainder of the day before flights were resumed later. About 30 flights were canceled at Cologne-Bonn airport for the same reason a day earlier.

That wasn’t the only attempt for airport activism: Authorities foiled similar attempts at other European airports, including London, Vienna, Oslo and Zurich.The activists said such blockades were just the start of a wide campaign to end fossil fuels by 2030 with similar actions planned across Europe and North America in the coming weeks.

The story grabbed a lot of ink in the int’l press over the weekend: Reuters | AP | Financial Times | CNN | The Guardian | BBC | CBS

^^ We have everything on this story and more in the news well, below.

HAPPENING TODAY-

Chilean President Gabriel Boric lands in the UAE for the first time to meet with President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan today, Wam reports. The two leaders will discuss economic, trade, and developmental cooperation and make an announcement on their trade and economic partnership, for which they recently concluded negotiations. The agreement is set to boost cooperation on food security, tech, investment, and space.

WATCH THIS SPACE-

#1- Egypt is considering the purchase of a floating regasification unit in partnership with Jordan to uptake and process LNG shipments for integration into their national grids, two sources told AlSharq Business. The ship will reportedly be co-owned by the two countries, who are currently in talks to weigh the “feasibility of jointly purchasing a regasification ship to meet the energy needs of both countries,” one source told the news outlet. The ship would be leased out to other nations once both countries stabilize their gas supply.

Background: Egypt and Jordan agreed to purchase LNG to circumvent electricity shortages in April, with Egypt’s Natural Gas Holding Company (EGAS) having purchased an LNG shipment slated for delivery at Jordan’s Aqaba gasification plant, which will be transported to Egypt via a gas pipeline.

#2- Oman’s Ibri city will integrate logistics services as part of its expansion plans, OmanObserver reported on Saturday. The city infrastructure plan includes developing a dry port, warehousing and logistics infrastructure, and manufacturing centers as part of plans to establish itself as a strategic logistics hub in Al Dhahirah governorate.

#3- Indian airline IndiGo will lease six Boeing 737 Max aircraft from Qatar Airways to counter an aircraft shortage caused by engine and supply chain issues, Indian news outlet the Financial Express reported on Saturday. The agreement is under a damp lease and includes maintenance, cabin crew training, and ins. services from Qatar Airways. The budget airline had said it planned to lease five Boeing 737 Max aircraft from Qatar Airways for six months to meet summer season travel demands back in February.

#4- Some 80 nations including Saudi Arabia reached an agreement on rules regulating global e-commerce on Friday, including the recognition of e-signatures and protection against online fraud, Arab News reports. A statement by the World Trade Organization said participants agreed on a preliminary “stabilized text” after five years of talks about what could become the first global digital trade agreement. The agreement among the 80 members won’t become a full WTO pact unless all members of the UN trade body sign on.

The goal: To make e-commerce faster, more affordable, and more secure on a global scale while reducing barriers, according to a statement by the UK Department for Business and Trade.

The provisions include the recognition of e-signatures and e-documents, protection against online fraud and misleading claims, digitalization of customs documents and processes, limitations on spam, protections for personal data, and support for least-developed countries, a the text of the agreement (pdf) shows.

BACKGROUND- Australia, Japan, and Singapore led the talks, which both the European Union and China have hailed as “historic” and “groundbreaking.”

No US backing just yet: The US said while the text was a positive step, more is needed to be done, including wording about exceptions for security interests, according to Reuters. “We look forward to working with interested members in finding solutions to all remaining issues and moving the negotiation to a timely conclusion,” US WTO ambassador Maria Pagan said. Others including Brazil, Indonesia, and Turkey also had minor reservations over the text, a trade source told Reuters.

#5- UAE dutyfree silver and platinum exports to India halted: India has terminated its dutyfree imports of silver and platinum from the UAE, following a reduction in import taxes to below the tax agreed between the countries under their economic partnership agreement, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing Indian government officials.

The Indian government has slashed import duties on gold and silver from 15% to 6%. With the duty now lower than the 8% tax under the economic agreement with the UAE, “nobody is importing silver,” Prithviraj Kothari, president of the India Bullion and Jewellers Association told Reuters.

In context: The UAE accounts for nearly half of India’s silver imports, as importers made use of the lower 8% tax, with shipments surging from 133 tonnes to almost 2k tonnes over the first five months of 2024.

#6- We finally have a tender for Baghdad International Airport: Iraq has issued a two-stage public tender for a private partner to operate and develop Baghdad International Airport under a PPP contract, AFP reported last week, citing a document it has seen. The deadline for bid submission is 12 September, with the selected bidder “expected to modernize and rehabilitate the airport infrastructure, expand passenger and cargo terminal facilities… and operate and maintain the airport in line with international best practice,” the document said.

A first for Iraq: The move marks the “first time that the Iraqi government, in cooperation with the IFC, opens its airports to private international investment,” Iraqi foreign affairs advisor to the PM Farhad Alaaldin told AFP.

Iraq brought out the big guns: The Iraqi government has inked an agreement with the World Bank’s International Financial Cooperation to act as a lead advisor for the PPP. The IFC will provide oversight from its inception and ensure the new services comply with international standards.

MARKET WATCH-

#1- Oil prices rose in early morning trading backed by concern on growing escalation between Israel and Lebanon, Reuters reports. Brent crude futures rose USD 0.33 to USD 81.46 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate climbed USD 0.23 to USD 77.36 a barrel. “Worries over escalating tensions in the Middle East prompted fresh buying, but gains were limited by lingering concerns of weakening demand in China,” Fujitomi Securities analyst Toshitaka Tazawa told the newswire.

#2- Saudi Arabia purchased fuel oil from Kuwait in July for the first time since May 2022 to cope with a summertime surge in demand for electricity, Reuters reports, citing shipping analytics firms Kpler and Vortexa.

By the numbers: Saudi imported c. 37k barrels per day of fuel oil from Kuwait and is on track to buy more in August Aramco Trading was awarded a tender to purchase 130k tons of very low sulfur fuel oil from Kuwait’s Al Zour refinery, trade sources said.

IN CONTEXT- Russia is Saudi’s preferred supplier of fuel oil, but has been supplying more and more to Chinese and Indian buyers, prompting Saudi to buy from Kuwait.

#3-Drewry shipping index breaks 12-week gain streak: The Drewry World Container Index fell 2.2% to USD 5,8k per 40-ft container on Thursday, ending an almost three-month rise, Bloomberg reported. The spot rate decline came on the back of low demand due to US tariffs on Chinese goods and trade disruptions sparked an earlier-than-usual peak season for restocking.

#4- Baltic index sees weekly fall: The Baltic Exchange’s dry bulk sea freight index — which tracks rates for the capesize, panamax, and supramax vessel segment — was down 1.4% to 1,808 on Saturday, its lowest level in two months, weighed down by low capesize rates, Reuters reported. Capesize dipped 3% to 2,614, while the panamax segment was up 0.4% to 1,792 points. The smaller supramax index fell 0.1% to 1,386 points.

DATA POINTS-

#1- King Abdul Aziz Port in Dammam saw 28.8% y-o-y growth in cargo throughput in June, hitting 24.9 mn tons, compared to 19.4 mn tons in the same month last year, according to a statement from the Saudi Ports Authority (Mawani). Exported containers increased 39.1% to 624.7k TEUs, while imported containers rose 34.7% to 872.4 TEUs. Meanwhile, transshipment containers volume increased 87.9% y-o-y to 37.8k TEUs.

ALSO- Cargo transported on freight trains rose 9% in 2Q 2024 to 6.9 mn tons, the Transport General Authority said in a post on X.

#2- Saudi’s non-oil exports rose 2.1% y-o-y in May 2024, according to the latest data from the General Authority for Statistics (pdf). Total non-oil exports, including re-exports increased 8.2% in May compared to the same month last year. Meanwhile, import volumes increased 2.6%.

SOUND SMART- Re-exports are products that one country imports and re-sells to another country as-is, without providing added value or labor input in the process. This can happen for various reasons, including taking advantage of price differences between markets, fulfilling orders, or redistributing goods to markets where there is demand.

CIRCLE YOUR CALENDAR-

Saudi Arabia will host the Saudi Warehousing and Logistics Expo on Monday, 2 September to Wednesday, 4 September in Riyadh. The event will bring together leaders in the supply chain, warehousing, and logistics industry from across the Kingdom to discuss investments, trade, geopolitical risks, and localized manufacturing.

Egypt will host the Egypt International Airshow on Tuesday, 3 September to Thursday, 5 September in El Alamein. The event will host a range of discussions touching on industrialization, digitalization, and globalization in the regional commercial aviation sector. During the event, aircrafts and innovative aerospace products, and services will be showcased.

Saudi Arabia will host SkyMove MENA on Tuesday, 10 September and Wednesday, 11 September in Riyadh. The event will gather global industry stakeholders, experts, and service providers to discuss challenges in the regional aviation industry.

Check out our full calendar at the bottom of this email for a comprehensive listing of upcoming news events and news triggers.

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Rail

Oman to develop a new LNG railway in South Sharqiyah

Oman lays new tracks to boost LNG infrastructure: Oman’s Energy and Minerals Ministry will build a new liquefied natural gas (LNG) rail connection at the Qalhat Industrial Complex in South Sharqiyah to boost Oman’s LNG production to 15.2 m metric tonnes per year, according to a statement released on Saturday. The project is slated to be operational by 2029 and no investment ticket has been disclosed.

What we know: The new train will have a capacity of 3.8 mm metric tonnes of LNG per year. The Omani government is in the process of finalizing the front-end engineering design (FEED) study for the project in order to announce the project’s final investment decision (FID).

Why is this significant? “The addition of a new LNG train is a key component of Oman’s strategy to solidify its position as a leading producer and exporter of liquefied natural gas in the global market,” Oman’s Energy Minister Salem Al Aufi said in the statement.

LNG is big in Oman: The country — the ninth-largest LNG exporter globally — exported nearly 1 mn metric tonnes of LNG in February 2024, with global exports totalling 33.9 mn tonnes. It also exported 11.4 mn metric tonnes of LNG in 2023, making up 3% of the world’s total LNG exports.

There’s been a lot of Omani LNG action lately: Oman’s Asyad Group is planning an IPO of its LNG transport arm Asyad Shipping by the end of year. TotalEnergies inked a Sale and Purchase Agreement (SPA) with Oman LNG back in April to offtake 0.8 mn metric tons per annum of LNG for a 10-year period beginning in 2025. Oman LNG also signed a SPA with Turkey’s BOTAS Petroleum Pipeline Corporation for the supply of 1 mn metric tonnes per annum (mtpa) of LNG for 10 years and Japan’s Jera for the supply of 0.8 mn metric tons of LNG per year over the same period — both starting 2025.

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Aviation

Saudi’s Flynas places an order for 160 aircraft from Airbus

Saudi Arabian airline Flynas has placed a “landmark” order with Airbus for 30 wide-body A330neo and 130 narrow-body A320 aircraft, doubling the airline’s total Airbus orders to 280, according to a statement released on Thursday. Under the agreement, Flynas will buy 75 A320neo family aircraft and 15 A330-900, according to a separate statement by Airbus. Flynas will also have options for 55 A320neo aircraft and 15 A330s.

What we know so far: Deliveries for the A330neos are scheduled to start in 2027, flynas said. No financial value was provided but independent aviation consultancy estimates the value of the order at USD 5.7 bn, according to Reuters.

Remember: Flynas placed a top-up order with Airbus last year for 30 A320neos, bringing its SAR 32 bn 2016 purchase with the company to a total of 120 aircraft. The carrier received its 50th aircraft from the substantial order of Airbus A320 airliners in April.

Following in the footsteps of Saudia? National carrier Saudia is set to receive the first deliveries from its landmark USD 19 bn Airbus order in 2026, when it will receive 15-16 aircraft out of the 105 it ordered, Saudia Director General Ibrahim Al Omar said.

Preparing to go public: Flynas confirmed plans for a listing on Tadawul this year. Further details on the IPO were not provided, but there were reports advisors had been hired to line up an IPO in December 2023. The airline tapped Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and Saudi Fransi Capital for the IPO.

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Investment Watch

Aramco and the PIF double their investments in Saudi steel production JV

Saudi, Chinese partners to kick USD 1 bn more into planned steel plate producer: China’s Baosteel, Aramco, and the Public Investment Fund (PIF) have committed to more than double their investments in a joint venture focused on steel plate production in Saudi Arabia, according to reports from Reuters and Bloomberg on Thursday. The plant is expected to go online at the end of 2026.

Why is this important? The project is set to have an annual capacity of 2.5 mn tons of direct reduced iron and 1.5 mn tons of steel plate. The plant will target the MENA oil and gas, shipbuilding, and construction industries.

The details: Baosteel will increase its investment to USD 1 bn, up from USD 437.5 mn, while Aramco and the PIF will raise theirs to USD 500 mn each from USD 218.8 mn. The shareholding structure will remain unchanged.

Who owns what: Baosteel, a unit of the world’s largest steelmaker, China Baowu Steel Group, signed a shareholders’ agreement with Aramco and the PIF in May 2023 to set up a JV in Ras Al-Khair City, with Baosteel owning a 50% stake, and Saudi Aramco and PIF taking 25% each.

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Diplomacy

UAE joins Brics trade talks + concludes negotiations on CEPA with Morocco

UAE Minister of State for Foreign Trade Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi signed a Joint Communique at the Brics Ministers’ Meeting, committing to strengthened cooperation in multilateral trade, joint value chains, agricultural trade, and special economic zones, Wam reports. The communique also focused on fostering e-commerce, supporting MSMEs through technology and exports, and integrating digital technologies like e-certification in global trade.

This was the UAE’s first participation in a Brics Trade Ministers’ Meeting since becoming a member in August 2023. The meeting also proposed a forum for cooperation on special economic zones and laid the groundwork for the upcoming BRICS Summit in Kazan, Russia.

The UAE + Morocco also wrapped trade talks: Foreign Trade Minister Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi and Morocco’s Minister of State for Foreign Trade Ryad Mezzour concluded negotiations on a comprehensive economic partnership agreement (CEPA) between the two countries, according to a separate Wam report.

The UAE-Morocco partnership will reduce or remove tariffs, improve market access, harmonize customs, and establish rules of origin for goods. It will also create investment and private-sector collaboration platforms in renewable energy, tourism, infrastructure, mining, food security, transport, logistics, and ICT.

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Earnings Watch

2Q earnings pile in from Bahri, Al Seer, and National Marine Dredging Co

Earnings season is in full swing with 2Q reports shuffling in, here’s how some of our regional logistics players are faring this morning…

BAHRI-

Saudi national shipping company Bahri’s 2Q 2024 bottom line rose by 48% y-o-y to SAR 733 mn, up some 61% from 1Q, according to a statement (pdf). The firm’s topline grew by 15% y-o-y to reach SAR 2.71 bn, rising around 17.2% q-o-q from SAR 2.31 bn.

A wider look at 1H performance: Bahri’s bottomline grew by 20% y-o-y to SAR 1.19 bn in 1H 2024, attributed to cost efficiency solutions, the statement said. The firm’s topline rose by 6% y-o-y to SAR 5.03 bn in 1H.

Behind the numbers: The boost to net gain was driven by growing operational activities and the improvement of global shipping rates, which caused a spike in revenues across a variety of sectors, including logistics, chemical transportation, and dry bulk, says the statement. A drop in oil transportation revenues was counterbalanced by a rise in global shipping rates, which have buoyed the firm’s earnings.

What they said: “Our success was driven by optimized fleet management and route

efficiency, supported by improved market conditions for VLCCs and chemical tankers,” said CEO Ahmed Ali Al Subaey.

Looking ahead: The company is looking to generate further growth through strategic fleet expansion and upgrades, says Al Subaey. The firm will also seek out strategic partnerships to boost its presence in domestic and international markets.

AL SEER MARINE-

Emirati maritime player Al Seer Marine reported AED 966.8 mn in losses in 2Q 2024, compared to a net income of AED 38 mn in the same period last year, according to its financials (pdf). Revenues rose 1% y-o-y to AED 316.1 mn.

On a six-month basis, the company recorded a net loss of AED 1.68 bn in 1H 2024, 124% steeper than the previous year’s AED 750 mn loss, according to the company’s management report (pdf). This came as direct costs increased as a percentage of revenue to 92%. The International Holding Company subsidiary recorded a 2.8% y-o-y increase in revenues to AED 580 mn during 1H.

NATIONAL MARINE DREDGING COMPANY-

UAE’s National Marine Dredging Company (NMDC) saw its net income climb 42% y-o-y to AED 820.2 mn in 2Q 2024, while revenues increased 91% y-o-y during the quarter to AED 6.78 bn, according to a disclosure (pdf) released last week.

On a six-month basis, NMDC’s net income increased 66% y-o-y in 1H 2024 to AED 1.46 bn, driven by cost optimization measures and technological advancements. Its top line rose 79% y-o-y to AED 12.13 bn, as the company was awarded “several significant contracts” during the period.

NMDC is eyeing an over AED 75 bn project pipeline: NMDC is currently participating in tenders for projects worth AED 75 bn within and outside the MENA region, the company’s CEO Yasser Zaghloul told Asharq Business (watch, runtime, 8:10). NMDC has secured its first project in Europe, and plans to expand its footprint further in the continent and other active global markets, Zaghloul said, without disclosing further details.

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Startup Watch

Emirati startup Watermelon Market secures USD 4 mn in series A funding round

Dubai-based food supply ordering platform Watermelon Market secured USD 4 mn in a series A funding round, Khaleej Times writes. The funding saw participation from prominent investors — with Daman Investments acting as the exclusive fundraising advisor — giving new investors a 13.8% stake and valuing the company at USD 29 mn.

Where is the money going? Watermelon plans to use the money to expand locally and regionally and to enhance their product offerings, Watermelon CEO Omar Al Shamsi was quoted as saying.

About Watermelon: Founded in 2020, Watermelon connects over 200 suppliers with 400 restaurants, according to the Abu Dhabi SME Hub. Watermelon concluded its seed funding round back in 2022.

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Also on Our Radar

Trade and last-mile delivery updates from the UAE and Saudi Arabia

TRADE-

#1- The UAE’s DP World has opened 51 new freight forwarding offices across Asia Pacific, expanding its end-to-end supply chain services in the region, according to a statement released on Friday. The move looks to help businesses form resilient supply chains amid increasing geopolitical and economic uncertainty impacting global trade, says Asia Pacific CEO and Managing Director Glen Hilton. The offices offer a range of services including port handling, freight management for both ocean and air, customs clearance, bonded warehousing services, and order and origin oversight. All these services are accessible through the firm’s single digital window.

#2- Saudi date farmers, sellers, marketers, and buyers are now required to use a centralized platform for trading after the National Center for Palms and Dates launched a seasonal markets system. The new system, launched alongside the Environment, Water, and Agriculture Ministry, is designed to regulate and organize date trading by introducing more efficiency in the trading market and improving the availability and quality of data on the market, it said in a post on X. The kingdom produces around 1.7 mn tonnes of dates annually, and exports SAR 1.5 tn-worth of dates every year.

What’s the seasonal market system? The platform aims to provide all the stakeholders in the dates value chain with enough data about the sector, along with offering marketing and agriculture services. It links sellers, buyers and marketers together and allows them to conduct their business, sign contracts, and monitor payments and business progress online on a centralized portal. It also provides detailed guidelines on how sellers and buyers can conduct their transactions.

#3- The Abu Dhabi Chamber of Commerce and Industry has signed an MoU with the Benin Chamber of Commerce to boost bilateral trade and investment cooperation between the emirate and the West African country, Wam reported on Thursday.

REMEMBER- The Abu Dhabi Chamber plans to ink 100 partnerships with other chambers of commerce and business offices across MENA, Asia, Europe, Australia, Africa, and Latin America by the end of 2024.

LAST-MILE DELIVERY-

Dubai’s Sustainable City will see delivery robots delivering orders from restaurants and shops in its plaza area — within 30 minutes — starting this month, as part of a trial, according to a press release published on Thursday. The trial operations will launch with three autonomous on-demand delivery robots developed by Dubai Future Labs, with systems powered by Lyve Global.

OTHER STORIES WORTH KNOWING THIS MORNING-

  • Yemenia Airways resumes flights to Egypt, Jordan, India: Yemen’s Yemenia Airways is resuming daily flights from Sanaa Airport to Cairo International Airport in Egypt and Queen Alia Airport in Amman, Jordan. It is also resuming two weekly flights to India. (Reuters)
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Around the World

Lineage brings in biggest IPO of 2024 raising USD 4.44 bn on Nasdaq + CMA CGM sees high shipping demand

Cold-storage warehouse giant Lineage has nabbed the largest IPO of 2024 by raising USD 4.44 bn on the US stock market, selling some 57 mn shares, Reuters reported last week. The company’s shares rose by 5% in their Nasdaq launch on Thursday, debuting at USD 82 per share and valued at USD 19.2 bn, beating the previous offer price of USD 78, according to a separate Reuters report. The listing is forecasted to encourage other firms to list “later this year or early 2025,” AJ Bell investment analyst Daniel Coatsworth told the newswire.

About Lineage: Lineage, launched in 2008 by co-founders Adam Forste and Keven Marchetti, operates 482 temperature-controlled warehouses globally, according to Reuters. The firm has since expanded through over 116 acquisitions and saw a topline of USD 5.3 bn last year.

French shipping conglomerate CMA CGM saw a 6.8% y-o-y increase in shipping demand volumes in 2Q 2024, Reuters reported on Thursday. The increase came on the back of a wave of restocking in the US. “The pace of restocking, which is supporting demand, is in line with economic activity and so we are not worried about an abrupt reversal in the trend,” CFO Ramon Fernandez said. Brisk international trade and the Red Sea disruptions supported the shipping giant’s maritime sector in 2Q 2024, the firm said, adding that it expects the shipping market to remain steady later this year as new capacity arrives.

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On Your Way Out

Parkwind wraps trial on the world's first charging point for boats at sea

First charging point for ships at sea is now operational: Belgian renewables company Parkwind – a subsidiary of Japanese power company Jera – has successfully installed and tested a new boat charging station system in the Belgian North Sea, according to a statement published last week. The charging station, powered by locally sourced renewable energy, allows vessels to connect to the charging cable and stay in place while charging despite sea currents. The trial proved the system could transfer electricity from a wind farm to the vessels safely without any disruption to the farm’s operations.

The details: The charging system — developed by UK-based MJR — supports both CTV and SOV charging, significantly cutting emissions from diesel generators. This initiative is partly funded by The Offshore Wind Growth Partnership and supported by the UK Department of Transport. Parkwind and MJR plan to incorporate lessons from the trial into the first commercial offshore charging system, scheduled for delivery in 1Q 2025.


AUGUST

21-22 August (Wednesday-Thursday): Rex Fuels Global Expo & Conference 2024- Bitumen, Petrochemicals & Products, Dubai, UAE.

SEPTEMBER

2-4 September (Monday-Wednesday): Saudi Warehousing & Logistics Expo, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

3-5 September (Tuesday-Thursday): Egypt International Airshow, El Alamein, Egypt.

10-11 September (Tuesday-Wednesday): SkyMove MENA, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

12 September (Wednesday): Deadline for companies to submit bids for expansion and operation of Baghdad’s International Airport.

18-19 September (Wednesday-Thursday): Saudi Maritime & Logistics Congress, Dammam, Saudi Arabia.

23-25 September (Monday-Wednesday): WorldFreezonesOrganization’s Annual International Conference and Exhibition (AICE) , Dubai, UAE.

23-26 September (Monday-Thursday): Freight Summit 15th Global Conference, Dubai, UAE.

25-26 September (Wednesday-Thursday): Global Aerospace Summit, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

30 September – 2 October (Monday-Wednesday): African, Middle East & Islamic Finance Aviation 100 Awards, Dubai, UAE.

OCTOBER

6-8 October (Sunday-Tuesday): Routes World 2024, Bahrain.

8-10 October (Tuesday-Thursday): The Global Rail Transport Infrastructure Exhibition and Conference(Global Rail), Abu Dhabi, UAE.

7-9 October (Monday-Wednesday): AFSIC – Investing in Africa, London, UK.

8-10 October (Tuesday-Thursday): AntwerpXL Expo, Antwerp, Belgium.

13 October (Sunday): International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) Congress, Marrakesh, Morocco.

16-17 October (Monday-Tuesday): Global Airport & Aviation Forum, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

21-22 October (Monday-Tuesday): Smart Ports & Logistics Transformation Summit, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

22-24 October (Tuesday-Thursday): Asean Ports and Logistics, Johor, Malaysia.

22-24 October (Tuesday-Thursday): Global Ports Forum, Singapore.

26-27 October (Saturday-Sunday): International Conference on Tourism, Transport, and Logistics, Dubai, UAE.

NOVEMBER

11-12 November (Monday-Tuesday): World Advanced Manufacturing Logistics Summit & Expo, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

11-12 November (Monday-Tuesday): Saudi Airport Exhibition, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

11-14 November (Monday-Thursday): ADIPEC Maritime and Logistics Exhibition and Conference, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

13-15 November (Wednesday-Friday): The Bahrain International Airshow, Sakhir Airbase, Bahrain.

18-20 November (Monday-Wednesday): The Heavy Equipment and Truck Show, Damman, Saudi Arabia.

19-21 November (Tuesday-Thursday): Saudi International Maritime Forum, Dammam, Saudi Arabia.

18-19 November (Monday-Tuesday): G20 Summit, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

20-21 November (Wednesday-Thursday): Saudi Rail Exhibition, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

DECEMBER

2-3 December (Monday-Tuesday) Wings of Change Middle East, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

10-11 December (Tuesday-Wednesday): Rail Industry Summit, Casablanca, Morocco.

10-12 December (Tuesday-Thursday): Middle East Business Aviation, Dubai, UAE.

20 December (Wednesday): The Iran-Senegal Joint Economic Cooperation Commission, Dakar, Senegal.

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

IATA Annual General Meeting (AGM) and World Air Transport Summit, New Delhi, India.

1H 2024: Civil Construction subcontracts for construction firms in Oman for implementation of the Abu Dhabi – Suhar rail link to be announced.

2H 2024: Bahri’s barges for Saline Water Conversion Corporation (SWCC) to begin initial and commercial operation.

King Salman Energy Park is set to become operational.

The Cross-Border Digital Trade Forum, Dubai.

2025

FEBRUARY

4-5 February (Tuesday-Wednesday): Seatrade Maritime Qatar, Doha, Qatar.

APRIL

16-17 April: Global Ports Forum, Dubai, UAE.

Mid-2025: Iraq will complete phase one of the construction of the Grand Faw Port.

DHL and Aramco’s logistics and procurement hub in Saudi Arabia will commence operations.

AD Ports-operated Safaga Port’s multi-purpose terminal will become operational.

Phase 3 of APM Terminals Tangier MedPort to be complete and operational.

1Q 2025: Sadr Park’s Logistics Center in Riyadh to be completed.

1Q 2025: Phase twoof Jafza Logistics Park to be completed.

2026

2026 UNCTAD Global Supply Chains Forum, Saudi Arabia.

2027

4Q 2027: Oman’s Musandam Airport construction to be completed.

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