Egypt unveils plan for new desert city in latest megaproject
Egyptian farmers use a threshing machine as they harvest wheat crop at a farmland on the River Nile, near Cairo, Egypt. PHOTO: REUTERS
CAIRO - Egypt on June 1 unveiled plans for a vast new urban development west of Cairo where a man-made channel of the River Nile will eventually wind through what was once arid desert.
The new city, named Jirian meaning 'Flow' in Arabic, is part of Egypt's Nile Delta scheme, a massive agricultural initiative aiming to reclaim about 10,117 sq km west of the original Nile Delta.
The ambitious agricultural project, which started in 2021, seeks to boost production of strategic crops such as wheat and corn while reducing the North African country's food import bill.
The project is the latest in a string of megaprojects launched by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in recent years, including a new administrative capital east of Cairo.
While officials say these projects are key to Egypt's long-term growth, they have also contributed to the country's soaring foreign debt, which quadrupled since 2015 to reach US$155.2 billion (S$200 billion) by late 2024.
The country has also received billions of dollars from the International Monetary Fund and the European Union to ensure its financial stability, with the EU pledging billions more in May.
At a launch event on June 1, Egyptian Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouli called the Jirian project 'an urban and development revolution'.
He added that it would create 250,000 jobs and serve as the cornerstone of a wider development zone equivalent in size to four to five governorates.
'We are talking about full-spectrum development,' he told reporters, describing a sprawling urban zone that will include industry, logistics hubs and homes for 'between 2.5 and 3 million families'.
The government did not disclose the total cost of the project which is being developed in partnership with three major Egyptian real estate firms.
The new Nile Delta project comes at a time when Egypt is already under pressure to secure its water future.
With 97 per cent of its fresh water sourced from the Nile, the country has been locked in a years-long dispute with Addis Ababa over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, which Cairo fears could reduce downstream water flows.
Developers said that a canal connected to the Nile will run through the heart of the 7 sq km Jirian city, occupying a fifth of its total area and serving both as a scenic centrepiece and an irrigation source for surrounding farmland.
The project will feature luxury residences, 80-storey skyscrapers, international universities and hospitals, an eco-friendly hotel, commercial zones as well as a cultural and media district, they added.
It will also lie just minutes away from the Grand Egyptian Museum, which is due to fully open in July, the Giza Pyramids and nearby Sphinx international airport.
Construction began five months ago and is expected to be completed within five years, according to the project's developers. AFP
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Trump's ‘man-to-man' style won't work on Xi, former aide says
US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are likely to speak this week. PHOTO: REUTERS SINGAPORE – A potential trade deal between the world's top two economies hinges on US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping overcoming core differences in their negotiation styles, former acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney said. 'There's a fundamental disconnect here,' Mr Mulvaney told Bloomberg TV on June 3. 'Trump wants to talk at the very highest levels. That's not always how the Chinese want to do business.' Mr Mulvaney's comments highlight a potential hurdle to a call between the leaders that the White House said is likely this week. Such direct contact could potentially ease tensions that have surged over access to chips and rare earths after earlier talks secured a 90-day reprieve for drastic tariffs. Mr Mulvaney, who also served as Mr Trump's budget director during his first term, said his former boss favours direct communications with the principal in business or politics alike. That approach, however, contrasts with the usual practice of the Chinese leader, who prefers that advisers iron out key issues beforehand. 'I do not see them being able to pull off a deal the old-fashioned way, which is going through the back channels,' Mr Mulvaney said, speaking on the sidelines of the Nomura Investment Forum Asia in Singapore. 'And I think it'd be very difficult to do a deal going the Trump way, which is only Xi to Trump man-to-man.' White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on June 2 the presidents are likely to speak this week, without giving a date for the 'potential' call. China's Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on a possible call. Mr Mulvaney replaced Mr John Kelly as chief of staff during the first Trump administration, but was never formally named to the role, serving over a year in an acting capacity. The former South Carolina congressman was also in charge of the Office of Management and Budget from 2017 to 2020. He said he believes that the US and China can find a way to co-exist, provided that Beijing takes steps to become what he called a 'leading nation of the world.' 'They can't steal people's intellectual property. They can't force you into bad deals in order to do business in your country. They can't hide information when they deal with pandemics, like they did with Covid-19,' he said. 'First-tier nations of the world don't do that. China's going to be become a first-tier nation. They need to step up their game.' BLOOMBERG Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Business Times
an hour ago
- Business Times
China passenger trips up 3% during Dragon Boat holiday
[HONG KONG] People took an estimated 657 million passenger trips during this year's Dragon Boat Festival holiday, up 3 per cent year on year, China's state broadcaster reported, with the indicator closely watched as a barometer of Chinese consumer confidence. Consumption in the world's second-largest economy has suffered amidst sputtering growth and a prolonged property crisis, while uncertainty from the US-China trade war has also affected consumer confidence. The Dragon Boat Festival took place from May 31 to Jun 2 – and is celebrated throughout the country with local dragon boat races and many people taking the opportunity to have a short holiday. There were an average of 219 million domestic trips per day, broadcaster CCTV said late on Monday (Jun 2), with both China's rail and air volumes seeing robust passenger flow. Cross border trips rose 2.7 per cent to 5.9 million, with a total of 231,000 foreign nationals entering the country visa-free during the holiday. China has been expanding its visa policy, with citizens of 43 countries granted visa-free access, while visa-free transit for up to 240 hours in China is available for 54 countries. Rail lines saw the peak of return passenger flow on Jun 2, with authorities adding 1,279 trains to more than 11,000 passenger trains overall across the country, while road travel was up 3 per cent year on year, with 600 million travellers recorded, mostly travelling short distances. The holiday also boosted spending on entertainment, with total box office revenue reaching 460 million yuan (S$83 million), surpassing last year's 384 million yuan, according to data from online ticketing platform Maoyan. Tom Cruise's latest movie Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning topped charts, and generated 228 million yuan, half of the total revenue during the holiday period, which was seen as a positive indicator for the upcoming summer season. REUTERS

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Hong Kong leader John Lee says sudden removal of China's top official in the city was ‘normal'
China announced that Mr Zheng Yanxiong, the director of China's Liaison Office in Hong Kong had been "removed" from his post. PHOTO: REUTERS Hong Kong leader John Lee says sudden removal of China's top official in the city was 'normal' HONG KONG - Hong Kong's leader said on June 3 that China's recent removal of its top representative in the city, known for his hardline policies on national security, had been a "normal" personnel change. In a surprise development, China announced late on May 30 that Mr Zheng Yanxiong, the director of China's Liaison Office in Hong Kong - Beijing's main representative office in the city with powerful oversight over local affairs - had been "removed" from his post. He was replaced by Mr Zhou Ji, a senior official with the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office on the State Council. Mr Zheng, who played a key role in the crackdown on Hong Kong's democratic movement in recent years, was also stripped of his role as China's national security adviser on a committee overseeing national security in Hong Kong. No explanation by Beijing or Chinese state media was given for the change. According to a person with knowledge of the matter, Hong Kong-based conglomerate CK Hutchison's proposed sale of its global port network to a consortium initially led by US. firm Blackrock had caught senior Chinese leaders "by surprise" as they had not been informed beforehand and Mr Zheng was partly blamed for that. The person, who has spoken with the liaison office, declined to be identified as the discussions were confidential. The Liaison Office gave no immediate response to faxed questions from Reuters. Mr Zheng had served in the post since January 2023 and while the position has no fixed term, his tenure was shorter than predecessors including Mr Luo Huining and Mr Zhang Xiaoming. "The change of the Liaison office director is I believe, as with all changes of officials, very normal," Mr Lee told reporters during a weekly briefing, without being drawn on reasons for the reshuffle. "Director Zheng has spent around 5 years (in Hong Kong). Hong Kong was going through a transition period of chaos to order," Mr Lee said, referring to the months-long pro-democracy protests that erupted across Hong Kong in 2019 while adding that he looked forward to working with Mr Zhou. CK Hutchison's ports deal has been criticised in Chinese state media as "betraying" China's interests and bowing to US political pressure. The conglomerate, controlled by tycoon Li Ka-shing, agreed in March to sell the majority of its US$22.8 billion (S$29.35 billion) global ports business, including assets along the strategically significant Panama Canal, to the consortium. The consortium is now being led by another member - Terminal Investment Limited, which is majority-owned by Italian billionaire Gianluigi Aponte's family-run MSC Mediterranean Shipping Company. The deal is still being negotiated. Asked whether Mr Zheng's removal reflected a pivot by Beijing towards economic development from national security, Mr Lee said Hong Kong still needed to pursue both. "Hong Kong faces a stage where development and safety must be addressed at the same time because any development must have a safe environment." China promulgated a powerful national security law in 2020, arresting scores of opposition democrats and activists, shuttering liberal media outlets and civil society groups and punishing free speech with sedition - moves that have drawn international criticism. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.