CAIRO: Egypt has invited 14 consortia to bid for a chance to say how they would develop the Suez Canal area, officials said yesterday, aiming to attract more ships and revenue to shore up the country’s finances.
The Suez Canal is the fastest shipping route between Europe and Asia and brings in around $5bn a year, a source of hard currency whose importance has risen since a popular uprising in 2011 scared off tourists and foreign investors.
“We must move dynamically ... Investors must find service here at an international level because if they do not find it here they will go some place else,” Mohab Memish, head of the Suez Canal Authority, said at a press conference in Ismailiya.
Egypt wants to turn 76,000 square kilometres around the canal into an international industrial and logistics hub, reviving economic development after more than three years of economic and political turmoil.
The approved consortia will be able to buy bidding documents from January 8 to 23. A winning consortium will be selected in the next three months and will have a further six months to come up with a master plan, Memish said.
Egypt’s Interim Prime Minister Hazem El Beblawi said the master plan will be presented to the cabinet within nine months. In November, Egypt will host an international conference for investors and in early 2015 infrastructure work on the project will begin, Memish said.
The Suez Canal project was a main feature in the campaigns of the most prominent candidates in the 2012 election. It was adopted by the Mursi administration but opposition groups accused him of attempting to seize and sell public land to foreign countries.
Memish said the project would be put to the public for national discussion before it is adopted.
Reuters