Showing posts with label Limitless. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Limitless. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 July 2009

Contractors in Dubai must be paid: UK Trade Minister

From ArabianBusiness.com 5 July 09
Rumours of colossal debts owed to large foreign contracting companies by both Dubai developers and the government's development companies have been circulating ever since the tide of redundancies began. If the stories are even half true, then there are some major companies which, if they remain unpaid, could be placed in serious financial jeopardy. Lord Davies is being diplomatic, as one would expect, but the question being asked is: if a company suffers financial loss in Dubai as a result of unpaid debts, why would that company consider doing business here again assuming things ever improve? I hear that some companies have discovered to their surprise that the contracts they signed aren't worth the paper they were written on.
The same question applies to the expats who've been made redundant and have now returned to their home countries or have moved elsewhere - why would they ever return to work in Dubai?
As an aside, Limitless has closed its Dubai office, all staff who'd been working on the Arabian Canal project have been made redundant.

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The British trade minister, Lord Davies, has insisted that British contractors and suppliers in Dubai that are owed money “need to be paid”, according to a report.
Lord Davies, was on an official diplomatic visit to Abu Dhabi, The National newspaper's website reported on Saturday.
Some $636m is owed to British consultants and engineers alone in unpaid fees from work undertaken in the UAE, according to the UK's Association for Consultancy and Engineering (ACE). It was reported that the ACE had asked Lord Mandelson, the British Business Secretary, for diplomatic intervention.
The National quoted Lord Davies as saying: “I think when you have a fast-expanding economy as Dubai was and then the world slows down, inevitably it takes a little bit of time to work out some of those issues, so yes, those companies, some of them need to be paid.
“I think it’s an important issue, so I don’t want to de-emphasise it. Neither do I want to make it the big be-all and end-all.”Though the minister acknowledged the severity of the problem, he described it as a cyclical symptom of the global financial crisis that ultimately would heal itself, the daily added. He was also positive about the future economic prospects of Dubai and the UAE.Long-term economic prospects for Dubai and the rest of the Emirates were bright, he told the Abu-Dhabi based daily.
“It’s an international phenomenon, it’s not just a Dubai phenomenon. People are owed money and they have to be paid. But on the other hand, let’s not move from that to saying Dubai is somehow finished. That’s just not the case."
“I think in the UK these images flash that all the expats are leaving and business is dying. I just don’t think it’s true. Is there a correction going on? Absolutely. Is it a painful one? Yes. But has Dubai got great medium- to long-term prospects? Yes, absolutely,” The National quoted Lord Davies as saying.

Tuesday, 26 May 2009

Arabian Canal phase two 'not cancelled'


From ConstructionWeek, 26 May 09.

I've heard from a source within Limitless that the company now has a grand total of three people working on the Arabian Canal project which, to me anyway, seems to indicate that the project is, well, um, cancelled.

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Developer Limitless has denied a report in a foreign construction magazine that described the second phase of the 76km Arabian Canal project as being ‘cancelled’. The wording in International Construction magazine read ‘Limitless has cancelled Phase two of its US $11 billion Arabian Canal project.’

However, a quote from the developer’s CEO, Saeed Ahmed Saeed used in the same article seemed to contradict this, saying that the contract had simply been postponed from its original award date in March. A spokesperson from the company, speaking to PMV today, said: “Our invitation for bids on phase two of the excavation received a healthy response from local and international firms. We have contacted them all to advise them of the postponement of the award of this contract, and have reassured them that we will be in touch as soon as possible to invite them to resubmit their bids.


"We remain committed to the Arabian Canal. Work continues on phase one, and we will announce news of subsequent phases at an appropriate time.”


Excavations on phase one of the canal, running from the Waterfront near Jebel Ali through to an area near the new Al Maktoum International Airport continue, courtesy of contractor Tristar. However, the pace of work has reportedly slowed over recent weeks.


The master plan of the Arabian Canal shows a city with space for 1.5 million people, based around an artificial creek, which will skirt around the perimeter of Dubai.