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UAE Circular Economy Council Holds First Meeting

Wednesday, 21 April 2021

The UAE Circular Economy Council met yesterday for the first time since it was established in February 2021. His Excellency Dr Abdullah Belhaif Al Nuaimi, Minister of Climate Change and Environment, presided over the meeting.

In his opening remarks, His Excellency Dr Al Nuaimi said: “The post-COVID-19 green recovery has become a core priority for the UAE. Incorporating circular economy principles in current and future strategies will support this priority. To guide efforts in this area, the UAE Circular Economy Policy 2021-2031 was approved earlier this year, and – once implemented – will serve as a general framework that identifies the optimal approach to support the transition to a circular economy in line with the objectives of the UAE Centennial 2071.”

His Excellency Dr Al Nuaimi noted that the Council’s first meeting served as a springboard for aligning efforts in the adoption of the circular economy between the government and the private sector. He invited all council members to step up cooperation and help develop a plan that can ensure optimal implementation of the policy.

His Excellency Abdulla bin Touq Al Marri, Minister of Economy, said: “The UAE leads regionally and is one of the pioneer countries globally in driving the transition towards circular economy. There is now a great need to educate and train as many companies in the UAE as possible on various aspects of the circular economy, including opportunities, profitability, and sustainability.”

He added: “To achieve that, we will utilize our international partnerships with the World Economic Forum (WEF), signed in 2019, and with Intesa Sanpaolo Group, signed in 2020. Various educational and training programs will be launched in the coming months in cooperation with the private sector, and new international partnerships will be formed as we are closely following the latest technological and policy advancements in developed countries.”

His Excellency Omar bin Sultan Al Olama, Minister of State for Artificial Intelligence, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications, highlighted the need to adopt blockchain-enabled barcodes for food products to track their life cycle from cradle to cradle, and promote the use of AI in manufacturing to increase early detection of faults in production lines. He added that these measures will contribute to production optimization and product life extension.

Eng Aisha Al Abdooli, Acting Assistant Undersecretary for the Green Development and Climate Change Sector at the Ministry of Climate Change and Environment, presented an overview of the Council’s responsibilities to the members. These included supervising the development of the policy’s implementation mechanism, monitoring the implementation policy and measuring progress, adapting federal and local government strategies to the policy requirements, promoting private sector participation in circular economy initiatives, conducting relevant research, and strengthening international cooperation.

Moreover, Eng Al Abdooli outlined the main steps to implement the policy, such as improving the understanding of the circular economy concept, setting SMART goals, facilitating partnerships between businesses as well as between business and academia, designing technical and financial support schemes, and supporting circular economy innovations and procurement practices.

The agenda also featured a global update on the Scale360° initiative by Antonia Gawel, Head of Circular Economy and Innovation at WEF, and a presentation of best practices in circular economy in the private sector by Ibrahim Al-Zu'bi, Chief Sustainability Officer at Majid Al Futtaim Holding.

 

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