CAIRO: European firms are signing deals potentially worth over 40 billion euros ($42.85 billion) with Egyptian partners, the EU Commission chief told an investment conference in Cairo on Saturday, part of a drive to bolster Egypt’s fragile economy.
The announcement by Commission President Ursula von der Leyen of more than 20 new deals or MOUs follows a 7.4 billion euro EU funding package and an upgraded relationship unveiled in March, as Egypt tried to contain spillover from conflicts in Gaza and Sudan, and European states pushed to prevent migrant flows across the Mediterranean.
Human rights groups have questioned the financing for Egypt, where President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has overseen a sweeping crackdown on political dissent for more than a decade.
European officials say they want to help Egypt become more resilient by boosting investment and the private sector, after repeated shocks including fallout from the war in Ukraine and COVID-19 exposed underlying economic weaknesses.
“Your stability and your prosperity are essential for an entire region,” von der Leyen said in a speech at the start of the two-day Egypt-EU investment conference.
Sisi said the conference came at “critical time” in light of successive international and regional crises that he said required coordination between Europe and Egypt.
Speakers at the event focused on Egypt’s strategic location between Europe, the Middle East and Africa, and its potential for exporting clean energy and providing inexpensive skilled labour for European companies looking to “nearshore”, or basing operations close to home markets.
About half of the deals being signed were in the energy sector, said Ditte Juul Joergensen, director general of the European Commission’s energy department.
European companies looking to invest were also in sectors including water management, construction, chemicals, shipping and aviation, von der Leyen said.
Egypt has received a windfall of foreign financing and pledges this year from the United Arab Emirates, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank as well as the EU.
That eased a long-running foreign currency crisis and prompted commitments to reforms including a more flexible exchange rate, controls on off-budget spending and the scaling back of the powerful role of the state and the military in the economy.
Such pledges have done little to invigorate the private sector in the past. In a sign of continuing challenges, Egypt is experiencing routine power cuts, and fertilizer and chemical plants have been halting production because of gas shortages.