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Abu Dhabi to begin work on Dh7.4b highways
Abu Dhabi to begin work on Dh7.4b highways Staff Reporter / 30 September 2013 The Department of Transport (DoT) will soon commence the construction of new Mafraq-Ghuwaifat and Abu Dhabi-Dubai highways with a budget of Dh7.4 billion. The announcement comes following the approval by the Executive Council during its recent meeting presided over by General Shaikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces and Chairman of the Council. The Council authorised the DoT to appoint contractors to execute both projects. The 327 kilometres Mafraq-Ghuwaifat main road is expected to be accomplished by 2017 and extends it Mafraq to the international border linking the UAE with Saudi Arabia in Ghuwaifat. It also passes through the Industrial Centre in Ruwais and some tourist and commercial locations in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi. About 80 kilometres of this road linking Baynounah Forest (East of Ruwais with Baraka to the west of Ruwais towards Silaa) was built in 2011. The project, parallel to the existing highway, encompasses constructing four new lanes in each direction from Mafraq to Baraka. Then, three lanes in each direction, but the road will expand to four lanes in each direction in the 22 kilometres closest to the borders with Saudi Arabia. In addition, the new road will be raised to avoid undesired impacts of underwater whilst helping drain rainwater and boost the road capacity to withstand the expected increase of number of vehicles. The road median has been designed to accommodate two future lanes in each direction, if needed. The project will also see the construction of (15) new upper interchanges with different engineering designs in Musaffah, Al Dhafra, ICAD, Tarif, Al Mirfa East and Al Mirfa West. Existing interchanges in Mafraq, Hamim, Abu Al Abbyad, and Madinat Zayed will also be modified. Mafraq-Ghuwaifat main road will encompass layby(s) (rest stops/side parking) on each direction for both light vehicles and heavy trucks as well as areas for ambulance, police vehicles, petrol stations and weight station. There will be a shoulder on the right of both directions for emergencies, a fence to protect road users and new sustainability-approved and energy-saving road lightening systems will be made. Concurrently, the DoT also unveiled that it is gearing up for the new Abu Dhabi-Dubai (E311) main road of 62 kilometres costing Dh2.1 billion. The project, parallel to existing Abu Dhabi-Dubai (E11) main road, extends from Mohammed bin Zayed Road in Seih Showaib through Al Maha Forest and Khalifa Industrial Zone Abu Dhabi (KIZAD) and will join up at the Suweihan Road (E20). The road is also expected to be accomplished by 2017. This project aims to alleviate traffic congestion on the current main road connecting Abu Dhabi to Dubai (E11), as studies show that traffic will go up from 700 vehicles per hour at peak time to more than 12,000 vehicles in 2030. For optimal road safety, the new Abu Dhabi-Dubai main road will feature four lanes in each direction; two shoulders on both right sides of the road and the wide median is designed for a staged upgrade and future expansion if needed. Six upper interchanges will be built. To ensure maximum safety, the new main road will come with a rainwater drainage system and will benefit from ample lighting system at night which follows best sustainable standards of reducing energy consumption. -news@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading
The world’s most expensive coffee beans
The world’s most expensive coffee beans Amanda Fisher (amanda@khaleejtimes.com) / 30 September 2013 With heart disease accounting for almost a third of all deaths in the country, a frappucino with more than a quarter fewer calories could be in order. Just days after World Heart Day, which fell on Sunday, coffee franchise Icons will launch in Dubai next week, with big plans to expand throughout the country and region — and fast. The founder and CEO Elena Weber, who at 27 may be one of the youngest such title holders in the world, is positioning the latest coffee shop cartel, which is already worth about Dh5 million, as a ‘healthy Starbucks’. “It’s a big thing, especially here in the region because of the diabetes issue, so we hope we can make a healthy change … it’s so surprising when you see even children here are getting diabetes…. I wanted to open the first outlet in Germany, but because (my backers) only do big things, they said ‘It’s perfect for the situation here’.” While obesity and diabetes were a global epidemic, Weber said because GCC rates were rising significantly there was room for the business to grow rapidly. Diabetes, which at $6.6 billion accounts for 40 per cent of the country’s overall health bill, links directly to heart disease. Weber got German pastry chef Stefan Kopetz, who has worked with the German national football team and supermodel Heidi Klum, on board early to create cakes and pastries from mother nature’s sugar, calorie-free stevia – also the super ingredient used in sweetening the shop’s coffees and drinks. “It took us a whole six months, but it’s not easy to bake with stevia. Because it’s 300 times sweeter than sugar, you need to (supplement) it with some bulkier materials.” They will also serve low-fat sandwiches and salads, using products that are organic and fairly traded where possible. However, prices would be comparable to Starbucks, Weber said. The coffee shop had frappuccinos with just 150 calories, compared with Starbucks’ 750, and hot chocolates with 120 calories, compared to 500, she said. “You will not taste any difference, it’s just as sweet … with normal sweeteners, they are so unhealthy, they’re full of chemicals … it’s totally unhealthy, it has bad effects on your bones, it has bad effects on your health in the long term. You don’t feel it tomorrow, but consumption over the years has really bad effects.” Weber said she and her team had spent about two years priming Icons for a fast uptake, and already had 10 franchises set to launch next year, with hopes to expand internationally within the same timeframe. But the operation had humble origins, with a twist of fate when the part-time model was looking for an overseas internship during her business administration and marketing degree at university in hometown Munich. Her mum found a story about another young German model working in the UAE, while looking at a magazine featuring her daughter. “I just had this intuition and contacted her and what happened? One week later I was in Dubai.” Weber found herself working under major UAE investment company Orix, where she made good contacts who she turned to years later after conceiving the coffee shop idea while doing a volunteering stint in Argentina, where she discovered stevia. “I think you always have to give back to people, and things happen for a reason. We support education and the farms where we are growing (coffee beans). We want to do something good for people, not only with the products we have that are sugar free, but…we also want to enhance life around here.” The flagship Icons store will open at the Souk Al Bahar on October 7. Continue reading
India, Pakistan leaders reach no concrete agreements
India, Pakistan leaders reach no concrete agreements (Reuters) / 30 September 2013 Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Pakistani counterpart, Nawaz Sharif, agreed on Sunday to work to restore a cross-border ceasefire after a spate of shootings in order to improve strained ties, officials said. Singh and Sharif met on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly, amid heightened tension between the nuclear-armed neighbours over the Kashmir region, sparked by series of fatal clashes on their de facto Himalayan border. India emerged from the meeting of more than an hour calling the talks “useful” while Pakistan called the atmosphere “very positive.” They both expressed a desire to improve ties but agreed that “peace and tranquillity across the LOC (Line of Control) is a precondition,” Indian national security adviser Shivshankar Menon told reporters in New York. “We need to address the issues that we face today and then we hope to move it forward,” he said. Pakistan’s Secretary for Foreign Affairs Jalil Abbas Jilani told reporters the New York meeting set the stage for future cooperation even though they did not reach specific agreements. “The most significant aspect of the meeting was that the leaders expressed their commitment to … better relations between the two countries,” he told reporters at a separate New York briefing. “Both sides wish to see a better India-Pakistan relationship than we have today,” said Menon. A series of fatal clashes along the so-called Line of Control dividing Kashmir between India and Pakistan have killed at least eight soldiers from both countries in less than two months. The South Asia Terrorism Portal, a website that tracks the violence, says this year’s toll is 44 members of the security forces, up from 17 for all of last year. In their speeches to the U.N. General Assembly, both leaders said they wanted to improve relations between their countries, which have fought three wars since becoming independent from Britain in 1947, two of them over Kashmir. The two prime ministers agreed to instruct military officials to work together to develop a mechanism to stop ceasefire violations, Menom and Jalil said. The two leaders accepted invitations to visit each other’s countries, but no dates were set, Menon added. Continue reading




