Archive for Egyptian government

Egypt has announced that it has changed from a gas-exporting to a gas importing country based on a decision issued by the Petroleum Minister that went into effect on 17 December.

The decision was published in the Official Gazette on Monday.

According to the ministerial order, the Egyptian Natural Gas Holding Company would either import the gas itself from international markets or via contracting companies. The gas would be transferred via national networks with necessary approvals.

Petroleum expert Medhat Youssef said the decision was “unprecedented,” especially as Egypt would import gas from international companies in Qatar, not the Qatari government. The import price is expected to reach US$14 per 1 million thermal units, whereas the government sells gas to factories for no more than $4.  

The Egyptian government exports gas to Jordan at $5.50 per one million units, while Qatar exports it at more than $9, Youssef said, arguing that Egypt administers its petroleum supply poorly and should reconsider prices.  

Importing gas at international prices would affect industries such as cement and fertilizer production.  

Meanwhile, Hany Suleiman, former Petroleum Ministry deputy for gas affairs, said gas production in Egypt does not meet demands, referring to expectations that the deficit would reach 3.7 billion cubic feet by 2018.

Daily consumption, according to Suleiman, will double by the fiscal year 2014/2015 reaching 25 million cubic feet, compared to around 12 million cubic feet in 2011/2012.

Importing gas requires infrastructure and facilities that would cost around $600 million to develop.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

Tags: , , , ,

Germany has postponed a 240 million euro partial debt relief plan for Egypt, while expressing concerns over a renewed dictatorship in Egypt.

German Development Minister Dirk Niebel told the daily Berliner Zeitung on Monday, “There’s the danger that the dictatorial system of the deposed President Mubarak is simply resurrected with other people.”

Niebel added that Instability in Egypt, as well as the deteriorating political situations in neighboring countries like Syria, Lebanon and Jordan, endanger the whole region, adding that his government had reduced its contacts with the Egyptian government indefinitely.

However, he expressed his country’s readiness to support democracy and law in Egypt, saying, “It’s in the hands of the Egyptian government.”

Tags: , ,

Arab League and United Nations envoy to Syria Lakhdar Brahimi arrived in Cairo from Kuwait Tuesday to discuss developments in Syria with Egyptian officials.

Sources in the delegation that received Brahimi said that he would meet with Egyptian government and Arab League officials, as well as with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

Brahimi will also meet with Syrian opposition figures, including Moaz al-Khatib, president of the Syrian National Coalition for Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, to discuss recent developments and next steps.

The visit comes as part of Brahimi’s regional trip, which included stops in Kuwait and the UAE to discuss the situation in Syria.

Tags: , , ,

The Mandara railway crossing in Assiut was almost the site of another crash Tuesday when a train passed suddenly without a signal, as is said to have happened on Saturday, when over 50 school children were killed after their bus collided with a train at the same spot.  

The worker monitoring the Upper Egyptian crossing Tuesday was shocked by the train, and pedestrians ran off the railway in a panic.

A policeman said he had submitted a report of the incident to the railway authority.

Transportation Minister Mohamed Rashad al-Matiny resigned after sharp criticism of the Egyptian government and the performance of the Egyptian National Railway Authority following Saturday’s incident.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

Tags: , , , ,

The Egyptian government trumpeted new investment opportunities in housing at an Egyptian-Turkish business forum attended by the prime ministers of both countries on Sunday, according to Egyptian state television.

Investment Minister Osama Saleh said the government had taken steps to remove bureaucratic obstacles and create a healthy atmosphere for investment. “We amended the investment act to allow adjustments of old contracts, so that they are not affected by changes that took place since the revolution,” he said. “And we are reconciling with the businessmen who were prosecuted.”

Saleh praised what he called booming Egyptian-Turkish relations, with a trade volume of US$5 billion, and Turkish investments with a market value of $1.5 billion. Of the 441 Turkish companies operating in Egypt, 83 percent are in the industrial sector, he added.

Housing Minister and Urban Development Minister Tareq Wafiq said there are opportunities available to investors in industry, agriculture and housing. He said the government is finalizing a comprehensive development plan, to be completed in 2052, that would expand the amount of livable land in the country. Currently the entire population lives on about 6 percent of Egypt’s total land area, most of which is in Cairo and the Delta.

He also called on Turkish investors to invest in Egyptian transportation, and also provide expertise in building new tramways in New Cairo and 6th of October City. Wafiq also called on Turkish businessmen to invest in projects for low-income Egyptians, which he said cost little and generate quick profits.

“The Suez Canal Zone development project is expected to turn that region into the economic capital of Egypt and an international transport hub,” Wafiq said. “The logistic and marine services will achieve returns of up to US$100 billion a year, 20 times greater than the [current] canal fees.”

Last month, Finance Minister Momtaz al-Saeed said Egypt and Turkey had agreed on a $1 billion Turkish loan as part of a $2 billion aid package to support the troubled Egyptian economy.

Tags: , ,

An October report from IMF’s Tokyo meeting, which Egyptian officials attended, recommends that the government allow the country’s currency to respond to market forces as a short-term policy solution to closing the widening budget deficit.

“Allowing the currency to move in line with market forces — while avoiding excessive short-term volatility — would help protect international reserves and competitiveness, while mobilizing foreign financing on favorable terms could bridge temporary balance of payments gaps,” the report, titled “Arab Countries in Transition: Economic Outlook and Key Challenges,” said.

The Egyptian government is in ongoing discussions with the IMF to secure the US$4.8 billion loan, news outlets reported on Sunday.

The government and the IMF are in agreement that the most pressing economic issue is the growing government deficit, and that it needs to be reduced by at least 20 percent, state-run news service MENA reported.

The only differences in opinion between the delegation and the government is how exactly the deficit should be decreased, with the Egyptian government favoring a progressive income tax and reducing subsidies, a source close to the negotiations told MENA.

The officials said the IMF delegation had approved of the government’s presented plan to streamline subsidies and raise tax revenue at the beginning of the visit last week.

The source also told MENA that the delegation had not alluded to any forced devaluation of the pound in its talks so far.

Meanwhile, the Egyptian pound fell to its lowest value in eight years on the first day in the delegation’s visit. The currency was bid as low as 6.1112 to the US dollar on Wednesday.

Traders told Reuters on Wednesday, that in allowing the pound to depreciate, the government was demonstrating to the IMF that it will be flexible with its currency in the coming period. Many experts say the Egyptian pound has become significantly over-valued against the dollar.

IMF and Egyptian government officials have repeatedly said that currency devaluation is not a condition for receiving the loan.  

In the 12 October report, the IMF also recommended that Egypt implement “a comprehensive and broadly supported economic program that addresses effectively the country’s imbalances,” cut back un-targeted energy subsidies, increase spending on infrastructure, education, and health, streamline burdensome regulations, and improve access to financing, especially for small enterprises.

Experts say that despite the progressing talks, much about the government’s economic reform plan remains unclear, saying officials have offered sparse explanation for how they will tackle the country’s economic predicament.

The government has yet to show, for example, how it will go about cutting subsidies.

“There are existing contracts between industry and the government, and officials have said there would be no retroactive implementation of this decision,” said Angus Blair, founder of The Signet Institute, a Cairo-based think-tank on MENA economies.  “It’s unclear how they’re going to deal with this.”

Blair said officials and experts who say the loan will signal a turning point in the country’s economic recovery are off-base.

“It depends on the structure of the package of measures being proposed," he said.

He’s not so optimistic that an agreement with Egypt and the IMF will reflect positively on the market.  

“Reality will hit, and serious action needs to be taken to induce domestic confidence,” he said.

The market mirrored Blair’s concerns on Sunday, with the EGX 30 index dropping 2.24 percent.

He also sees the government’s quietly allowing the pound to fall as not entirely reassuring.

“I would rather they had done it as part of a package to restore confidence,” he said.

Tags: , , , , ,

A senior government official said Thursday there has been a convergence of views between the IMF and the Egyptian government at the beginning of a new round of negotiations over a US$4.2 billion loan.

The government and the IMF aim to reach an agreement before the end of the year, which is expected to open the door to financing from other international lenders including the African Development Bank and the World Bank.

The official, who is close to the negotiations, said, “At the beginning of negotiations two days ago, the IMF delegation consented to the economic program and regulations proposed by the Egyptian government.”

The current talks are focusing on reforming the Egyptian economy, the source said, adding that signing the loan contract is a political decision.

The talks did not address the exchange rate or devaluing the pound, the source stressed, since the president, the finance minister and the governor of the Central Bank have all rejected this.

The government would announce the details of the negotiations and the reform program when meetings with the IMF delegation are concluded, the official said.

He said that some ideas were included in the program which were taken from community dialogue sessions, while others are still being studied by the government.

The current round of negotiations is proceeding “normally,” the official said. He added that any details regarding the restructuring of subsidy systems are in the hands of the Cabinet.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm
 

Tags: , , , ,

The Egyptian government may negotiate with Algeria for a US$2 billion deposit, said an official Egyptian government source.

The source told Al-Masry Al-Youm that the talks conducted by Prime Minister Hesham Qandil in Algeria on Sunday would discuss the subject.

Qandil is conducting talks on Sunday with Algerian Prime Minister Abdel Malek Sellal, in order to promote economic and investment relations between the two countries.

"Algeria has a foreign exchange reserve of $188 billion, and has lent the IMF $5 billion, a move that sparked sharp criticism of the Algerian government, which justified that [deposit] with the desire to have an influential voice inside the IMF, as a prelude to being a member of its board," the source said.

The source said Qandil's visit to Algeria “aims to solve the problem of the shortage of butane in the Egyptian market, since Algeria is the largest supplier of butane to Egypt, followed by Saudi Arabia."

The state budget deficit is expected to reach LE135 billion by the end of the year. Government figures said that the deficit was LE50.8 billion in the first quarter.

The delegation, headed by Qandil, includes Industry and Trade Minister Hatem Saleh, Communications Minister Salah Abdel Maqsoud, Planning and International Cooperation Minister Ashraf al-Araby, Foreign Minister Mohamed Kamel Amr and Petroleum Minister Osama Kamal.

Qandil's visit to Algeria is the first by an Egyptian prime minister since the 25 January revolution began. In 2008, Ahmed Nazif was the last prime minister to visit Algeria.

Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm

Tags: , ,

The Egyptian government has announced that it would send an economic delegation to South Korea in the near future to examine ways to bolster cooperation in several fields, including nuclear energy, Al-Hayat reported Sunday.

According to the London-based newspaper, Egypt is seeking to increase its trade with South Korea.

South Korean officials have said that Samsung has decided to establish its first center for development and research in Egypt, an investment worth more than US$300 million.

The Egyptian Tourism Ministry will also work to attract South Korean tourists back to Egypt. Around 76,000 South Korean tourists visited Egypt every year before the 25 January revolution. The Egyptian government also plans to resume direct flights between the two countries.

Total trade between Egypt and South Korea exceeds $3 billion a year, but Egyptian exports to South Korea remain low, with oil constituting 95 percent of them. South Korean investments in Egypt amount to $1 billion while Egyptian investments in South Korea are almost negligible, as investment in South Korea requires large amounts of capital and advanced technology.

Tags: , ,

 

Officials tried to assure foreign and domestic investors that the local climate for business is safe and friendly on Tuesday, after the Egyptian stock market took a hit Monday due to some tough rhetoric on corporate corruption from President Mohamed Morsy.

In a speech to commemorate the October 1973 war with Israel on Saturday, Morsy said that a government watchdogs are in the process of investigating several unnamed private companies for accusations of corrupt practices with the former regime.

Following his statements, the Egyptian Stock exchange’s largest index, the EGX 30, dropped a significant 2.42 percent on Monday. 

On Tuesday, Egyptian officials seemed to be assigned to damage control, trying to calm fears of a witch-hunt. They told investors they had no reason to close their pocketbooks.

“We want Egypt to be a mecca for investors,” Prime Minister Hisham Qandil said, in his remarks at the Euromoney conference, a gathering of investors, media, diplomatic and business leaders which organizers say is meant to help restart investment in the country’s ailing economy.

“Allow me to confirm that the Egyptian government is committed to economic reform and free market economics,” he said.

Addressing what he called the “rumors” that had caused the recent dip in investor confidence, Qandil said that the Egyptian government would respect all existing contracts, and abide by the laws under which they were signed. 

“Any action taken by the government will not be retroactive,” he said.

At the conference, other officials also stressed the importance of foreign investment returning to pre-January 25 2011 levels. The country has been trying to attract foreign investors after many left throughout the past year and a half of unrest. Foreign and domestic capital has yet to turn out in full, amid prolonged negotiations for a US$4.8 billion dollar loan from the IMF lack of a clear economic reform plan, dwindling foreign reserves, an expensive subsidy plan and growing budget deficit. 

“All of my faith is in the return of investment,” Finance Minister Mumtaz al-Saeed said.

Officials and finance leaders also decried the obstacles to investment in the country.

Minister of Investment Osama Saleh said that the two main challenges to investors are instability, production halts due to labor strikes, and bureaucratic legal hurtles.

He cited changes he made to the investment law in January 2012 that allowed for amicable resolutions of disagreements between private companies and the government as the most significant step towards bringing back capital to Egypt.

Business leaders also said Egypt has a ways to go before it can claim to be a welcoming climate for foreign investors, as the stock market's reaction to Morsy’s remarks last week demonstrated.

They called for the government to streamline legal procedures that issue licenses and approvals for businesses, and to foster a bureaucracy that is accountable, but not rendered ineffective by fear of corruption accusations. 

“The challenge is creating an environment where the bureaucracy can actually get things done,” said Ahmed Heikel, chairman and founder of Citadel Capital. “You can’t expect someone who is going to appear before the public prosecutor on corruption in the morning to go on in the afternoon and approve a license for an investing corporation.”

Tags: , , , ,