What's new

Egyptian National and Strategic Development Projects: News and Updates

Al-Sisi inspects modern, locally manufactured cars from major international companies

118569711_962281614291219_2474860787896841890_n.jpg


President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi inspected a number of modern car models of major international and locally manufactured companies that were equipped to work with the natural gas energy.. in preparation for putting them on the local market with facilities for purchase.


118580938_962281460957901_3531130083385674056_n.jpg


Ambassador Bassam Radi, a spokesman for the Presidency of the Republic, said that this is within the framework of supporting the national project to equip vehicles and means of transport to operate with natural gas energy, and for the great economic, environmental and social return that it achieves, and at the same time takes into account the application of the finest technical specifications that ensure the performance of these vehicles..

https://almalnews.com/السيسي-يتفقد-السيارات-الحديثة-المصنع/
Dr. Mostafa Madbouly added that there are mandates from President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi to work on localizing the electric car industry in Egypt, given that it is the future of the auto industry in the world, and therefore the government has sought to launch cooperation with international companies working in the field of electric cars manufacturing, with the aim of localizing this Industry, and taking advantage of the latest technologies that these companies have reached, so that Egypt becomes a regional center for the manufacture of electric cars and their export to Arab and African countries.

https://almalnews.com/تفاصيل-اجتماع-الحكومة-لتنفيذ-تكليفات/

If you asked me which one I would choose between the two new energy usage vehicles, and while the electric cars are the sexier and more popular model for the future of renewable energies as well as clean air even more than NG, I think a lot of people either underestimate or just don't know about the critical environmental impacts the mining of elements for all these batteries is doing to the environment. Now there could be a lot of impact from drilling for gas as well, but I think I would still choose it over the electric because in the end, I do think it is the lesser of the two evils as far as their specific environmental impacts. But how great it is to have the choice between the two and leave us old-fashioned, petrol-loving, horse power needing, speed fanatics some premium unleaded gasoline and leave us about our business!
 
.
If you asked me which one I would choose between the two new energy usage vehicles, and while the electric cars are the sexier and more popular model for the future of renewable energies as well as clean air even more than NG, I think a lot of people either underestimate or just don't know about the critical environmental impacts the mining of elements for all these batteries is doing to the environment. Now there could be a lot of impact from drilling for gas as well, but I think I would still choose it over the electric because in the end, I do think it is the lesser of the two evils as far as their specific environmental impacts. But how great it is to have the choice between the two and leave us old-fashioned, petrol-loving, horse power needing, speed fanatics some premium unleaded gasoline and leave us about our business!
The Egyptian choice for NGE is very clear.. But at the same time Egypt does not want to lag behind as far as Electric car's technologies are concerned.. and their potential export in the MENA region and Africa..smart thinking ahead..
 
.
The Ministry of Housing released this video:
I find this bravery, not only do they have the balls to pull this off but they do it despite all the domestic criticism... IMO it’s the most significant in the last 10 years, forget defence.
 
.
I find this bravery, not only do they have the balls to pull this off but they do it despite all the domestic criticism... IMO it’s the most significant in the last 10 years, forget defence.

Oh this is on a much larger scale of impressiveness, no question. The funny thing is that you would think it would be impossible for anyone to criticize what they're doing and what they've accomplished when all it's been geared for is the basic lifting of every Egyptian's living standards. How can anyone criticize the accomplishments for a better standard of living and an evolution of the country itself, the transformation is extraordinary and like he said, after mentioning 10 revamped existing cities, there's another 10 on top of those lol. It's truly remarkable and we've been astounded at this for a while now, probably because of observing from afar. But the fascinating thing is how there will always be the detractors, no matter the success.
 
. .
El Galala

lol, I used to go there back in the early 80's when it was nothing but a bunch of huts and I believe there was an American Army base on top of the hill as part of the peace treaty they were there to maintain a presence and watch and we would camp with all our gear on the beach bellow, a bunch of friends and myself and our canoes and skis and gliders and all this crazy stuff and the funny thing is the MPs at the base would go out in their blackhawks late like around 2am and scour the entire beach bellow the base camp. When we would show up and set up camp, a beach patrol would cruise by and we would let them know that we're camping here for a few days etc. so they knew we were there and would mess with us with their Blackhawks. They'd swoop down low with the heavy rotors thundering and fly along the water and shine a big light on our tents and wake us all up and tick us off the basterds lol. Couldn't do much even though it would've been nice to throw an orange or a frisbee but if we brought down the helo....not a good thing.

But that whole stretch on highway 65 from Port Tawfiq all the way down the Gulf of Suez is spectacular, just like he says in the song from the water to the land to the mountains is all it is for the entire stretch and just beautiful. It was much less crowded back then, of course.
 
.
lol, I used to go there back in the early 80's when it was nothing but a bunch of huts and I believe there was an American Army base on top of the hill as part of the peace treaty they were there to maintain a presence and watch and we would camp with all our gear on the beach bellow, a bunch of friends and myself and our canoes and skis and gliders and all this crazy stuff and the funny thing is the MPs at the base would go out in their blackhawks late like around 2am and scour the entire beach bellow the base camp. When we would show up and set up camp, a beach patrol would cruise by and we would let them know that we're camping here for a few days etc. so they knew we were there and would mess with us with their Blackhawks. They'd swoop down low with the heavy rotors thundering and fly along the water and shine a big light on our tents and wake us all up and tick us off the basterds lol. Couldn't do much even though it would've been nice to throw an orange or a frisbee but if we brought down the helo....not a good thing.

But that whole stretch on highway 65 from Port Tawfiq all the way down the Gulf of Suez is spectacular, just like he says in the song from the water to the land to the mountains is all it is for the entire stretch and just beautiful. It was much less crowded back then, of course.
Man, at least we know it’ll be a target site for them if they were to make a base in Egypt.
53D0C6AC-983E-4CA0-B32E-65FE6660A334.jpeg
2DF9B917-2CC9-4BF7-BD17-B8B724591706.jpeg

It’s small yet more construction is in progress. The university there has just opened it’s doors.
 
.
Man, at least we know it’ll be a target site for them if they were to make a base in Egypt.

Haven't been to that exact spot there in a long time but I believe they packed that base up in 85 or 87 once the Israelis were completely out of Sinai or even before that as it was a temporary thing back then.

But the other funny part is you look at all the cool touristic buildings and hotels and parks and stuff and none of that stuff was around back then, only a small restaurant/pub at the center of the beach area lool and we would all go there in the evening for dinner and start a fire on the beach and hang out and some of those clowns from the base would come down and someone would say something and fights would break out all the time and the MPs would come charging in their little jeeps LOL! Fun times. Now it's a full-fledged touristic destination. So isn't that whole stretch that includes Galala from Port Tawfiq to Hurghada is just one beautiful spot after the other.

85bbff80-e82a-4612-9175-64e1799785c1
 
.
2017
C844E6A3-53F9-4385-9EAB-5CCB5DEA1B1E.jpeg

2020
:- the future arrangement of agricultural lands can be seen.
EBBA0F60-3380-4A70-830B-955109B41A4E.jpeg

PuPpEt!
Msh keda?
 
. .
Egypt: A strategy for expanding desalination plants until 2050

65853cc4-9637-4119-abde-e451c9f8dbd7_16x9_1200x676.PNG


In light of the urban expansion witnessed by Egypt, and the water challenges that it suffers from, water desalination projects represent one of the most important projects that the Egyptian state is working to expand in the governorates bordering the Mediterranean and the Red Sea, in order to achieve maximum use of water to deal with water poverty.

The head of the natural resources department at the African Research Institute, Dr. Abbas al-Sharaqi, said in an interview with Al-Arabiya.net that the population of Egypt is about 100 million people, according to international standards, they need 100 billion cubic meters, while Egypt's water share is 55.5 billion cubic meters. In addition to about a billion of rain, and we use about 3.5 billion cubic meters of deep groundwater, for a total of 60 billion cubic meters with a water deficit of 40 billion cubic meters, this deficit is overcome by reusing about 20 billion cubic meters and importing crops equivalent to 20 Billion cubic meters remaining.

محطات تحلية المياه في مصر


He added that the cost of desalination is about $ 1000 per cubic meter and $ 200 per year for operation per cubic meter, with a total cost of about 15 pounds per cubic meter, of which about 50% is energy and operation.

The main deficit of water is in the agricultural sector, which consumes more than 80% of Egypt's water quota, which needs cheap water, as a cubic meter of water gives agricultural production ranging from 5 to 10 pounds using current technology and its cost, so desalination water is not economical. To be used for agricultural purposes, except that it is economical for other purposes such as industry, tourism and household uses, and the Nile water remains the economic one in all governorates near it for all uses.

For his part, Egyptian Deputy Minister of Housing, Dr. Sayed Ismail, told Al-Arabiya.net that the establishment of desalination plant projects is to maintain drinking water access to all regions in Egypt, increase the percentage of served areas and reduce the transportation of purified surface drinking water over long distances to reach coastal areas. This leads to large losses in drinking water, and large energy is consumed to transport those quantities, and the cost of operating, maintaining, replacing and renewing the lines carrying that water represents a great burden on the state, and from that resort to providing alternative water sources to surface water, including desalination.

Desalination energy

The Deputy Minister of Housing added that the ministry had increased the capacity of desalination plants during the previous 6 years from 80 thousand m3 / day to about 800 thousand m3 / day at the present time, and the strategic plan for desalination has been prepared to expand the establishment of desalination plants, with the aim of providing drinking water needs. In the areas bordering the Red Sea coast in the east and overlooking the Mediterranean coast to the north, overlooking the Gulf of Suez and Aqaba in the South Sinai Governorate, affected by critical canals, according to the Ministry of Irrigation's determinants.

In addition to providing alternative drinking water to stop the transportation of surface water through pipelines to the governorates of Matrouh, the Red Sea and South Sinai, providing drinking water to the state's national urban plan, providing drinking water to meet the natural population increase, and achieving sustainable and stable management by providing drinking water needs for the current and future period until the year. 2050.

Ismail indicated that 65 desalination plants have been implemented with a total capacity of 800 thousand m3 / day in the governorates of North Sinai, South Sinai, the Red Sea, Marsa Matrouh, Ismailia and Suez, and 19 new desalination plants with a capacity of 550 thousand m3 / day are being implemented, at a cost of 11 billion EGP in the governorates of Marsa Matrouh, the Red Sea, North Sinai, South Sinai, Port Said, Dakahlia, and Suez.

An expansion strategy

A strategic plan has also been prepared to expand the establishment of seawater desalination plants to provide drinking water needs, divided into 6 five-year plans extending from the year 2020 to the year 2050, in cooperation with all concerned authorities from different ministries, to provide a total capacity of 6.4 million m3 / day. , With a total expected cost of 134.2 billion pounds.

The plan includes 4 main axes, the first of which is to provide water needs to solve the current problems, and the future natural population increase of the existing residential communities, which is 1,353 thousand m3 / day, and the second is to provide alternative water needs to stop the transportation of drinking water to some coastal governorates 335 thousand m3 / day, and the third is to provide Alternative water needs for surface water, the fourth of which is the provision of the water needs required for urban development 966 thousand m3 / day.


https://www.alarabiya.net/ar/aswaq/...2ZC05YjlkLTRjOTQtYmJlYS02MWFjZDdkNTc5MTgifQ==
 
.
President Sisi Announces Major Initiative To Lift 12.5 Million Out Of Poverty

1508849408-author-3.jpg

By: NILE FM STAFF



  • /static/img_loader.jpg


    President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi announced a major expansion of the government's efforts to reduce Egypt's poverty with a new initiative that will see more than a thousand of Egypt's poorest villages undergo major development.
    Planning and Economic Development Minister Hala El Said appeared on Sada El Balad's "Ala Mas'ouleety" and spoke to Ahmed Moussa about some of the specifics of the plan, which will be a more comprehensive version of Egypt’s Decent Life initiative.
    The Egyptian government will develop towns and villages across the country to cut down on overpopulation, aiming to prioritize major developmental projects to new cities and villages outside the capital in order to create employment opportunities outside of Egypt's main cities.
    1599471316-New-Toshka-City-Invest-Gate-750x370_1.jpg
    New Toshka has been one of the models for urban development for Egypt's rural areas.
    "The project targets 1000 small villages nationwide in light of the Decent Life program," read the statement from the President's office, adding that: “The aim is to improve the citizens' standard of living, alleviate poverty, develop the infrastructure and basic services, such as education, housing, electricity, sanitation, drinking water, and health units. This is in addition to creating sustainable jobs.”
    “This means not leaving any house or road untouched by development,” said President El-Sisi when he discussed the early phase on the Decent Life initiative which is a strategy targeting 32 million people in some of Egypt’s poorest villages and has been designed by a group of Egyptian NGOs, universities, governmental institutions, and international organizations.
    Discussing her ministry’s projections, El Said stated that the latest announcement from the President will improve the lives of 12.5 million citizens in Egypt’s poorest regions. The program will span 3-4 years and will improve the village's sanitation, access to clean water, education, employment, and above all else, people's homes.
    So far, initiatives have mainly targeted villages in Upper Egypt, particularly around Assuit and Sohag, but also has seen work in Giza, Minya, Qena, Luxor, Aswan, New Valley, Qalioubiy, Beheira, Marsa Matrouh, and North Sinai, all areas which have more than 70% poverty.
    A major interest of the government is to wean impoverished regions of Egypt, particularly Upper Egypt, off the old subsidy system that increased monetary support to families based on how many children they had. This incentivized Upper Egyptian families to have more kids, without employment opportunities this contributed to poverty rather than alleviating it.
    While the Karama and Takaful social solidarity and cash transfer programs have been a part of Egypt's Decent Life initiative, the government wants to move from keeping people alive to make them productive, which will require major infrastructure developments to provide electricity, sanitation, water treatments, and high-quality affordable housing to Egypt's villages.
    1599471510-20191010_Egypt_Rural_Population_Annual-05.png
    Egypt still has more people living in rural areas than it has people living in urban areas, with a million people coming from the countryside to find work in the city every year, Egypt has prioritized the development of new cities to make room for the newly urbanized. However, Egypt’s cities are already under strain and close to breaking under highly-populated pressure. Cairo is already one of the world’s most insecure cities for access to water, and Alexandria, are the only locations to find work in the country.
    Of the million Egyptians attempting to escape endemic poverty in rural areas by coming to the cities, 60% of them will find themselves building and living in illegal informal settlements. Buildings that were constructed with poor safety regulations and often on farmable lands have become a steady drain on the country, so building better places to live in areas that provide employment are the two biggest factors the government will be exploring.
    The Egyptian government’s mains drive to develop Upper Egypt and Sinai have been major upgrades in agriculture. This has mainly come in two forms, major national projects to increase farmable land, and industrializing underdeveloped areas to increase production. In this effort, the Egyptian government has partnered with both the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the Food and Agriculture Organization to provide training to local farmers to increase the quality, production, and output of current operations.
    Upper Egypt has been slow to grow higher yield crops like fruit, jasmine, or other products for the European market. A deficit in sanitation and water treatment facilities has been one issue, 65% of impoverished villages do not have access to clean water, while poor infrastructure is another issue. So, correcting these two issues have been of paramount importance, and will continue to be as the government moves forward.
    1599471722-20191010_Egypt_Rural_Population_Annual-02.png
    In Upper Egypt, the government has worked to provide alternative income sources as agriculture is increasingly industrialized, thus requiring less labor which increases unemployment. In order to maintain the agriculture industrialization policy, the Egyptian government has increased alternative income sources, either by connecting weaving and metal-working craftsmen to the region and international markets, providing them training, machines, and subsidies to make their work a sustainable source of income.
    Egypt has also prioritized investments into mining operations around Upper Egypt and the Red Sea, particularly between Qena, Safaga, and Quseir. 2020 marked the first year that mining overtook investments in the energy sector as mining operations could help correct the imbalanced wealth distribution between North and South.
    The effort has taken on new urgency as the number of illegal building operations increased due to COVID-19, and Egypt's uneven development between north and south, east and west, has become a major weight pulling the country down as Egypt's population continues to increase. As with other high population countries like China, Korea, or Japan, Egypt will need to make all regions and individuals as productive as possible as the burden to provide welfare increases perpetually.

 
.
Ismail indicated that 65 desalination plants have been implemented with a total capacity of 800 thousand m3 / day in the governorates of North Sinai, South Sinai, the Red Sea, Marsa Matrouh, Ismailia and Suez, and 19 new desalination plants with a capacity of 550 thousand m3 / day are being implemented, at a cost of 11 billion EGP in the governorates of Marsa Matrouh, the Red Sea, North Sinai, South Sinai, Port Said, Dakahlia, and Suez.

65 desalination plants! lol! You think they aren't preparing for reducing their reliance on the nile? And this is something they actually started a while ago and now have so much momentum that there's nothing preventing them from stopping lol! Unbelievable. That Sisi has been the best thing that has happened to Egypt since.......they built the pyramids?

Discussing her ministry’s projections, El Said stated that the latest announcement from the President will improve the lives of 12.5 million citizens in Egypt’s poorest regions. The program will span 3-4 years and will improve the village's sanitation, access to clean water, education, employment, and above all else, people's homes.

Imagine a program to pull 12-1/2 million people out of poverty!? And this, just like the desalination projects is something that has been implemented a few years ago with many of the housing projects they've been putting up like it's no-one's business! But the haters will always hate and no matter what gets done, there will always be something -- even if it's untrue -- that they'll latch on to discredit Sisi and the current administration that has been nothing short of exemplary. With a few faults, of course. Those social aspects will fix themselves in time ISA and Egypt will soar. The dilemma now is do we give Sisi an additional 2 years to finish a lot of what he's started?

Also, the number I read the other day -- I think it was off one of yours or @The SC's post is the total spent on all the projects that have been implemented in Egypt by Sisi since 2014 exceeds $318 billion. That's pretty staggering at first but then when you look at what they've done with all that money, it's easy to make sense of that number.
 
.
Egypt will no longer allow building violations in villages and cities, says PM

Unplanned buildings have come to constitute about 50 percent of the urban clusters across villages and cities countrywide


Ahram Online , Wednesday 9 Sep 2020

Mostafa Madbouly

Prime Minister of Egypt Mostafa Madbouly (Al-Ahram)

Egypt's Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly said the Egyptian government will confront any attempt to build in a random manner on state lands to end what he described as "the bleeding of haphazard construction."

Egypt has seen a significant rise in illegal construction since the security vacuum that followed the 2011 uprising, with many people constructing multi-storey buildings without acquiring the necessary permits or complying with engineering safety standards.
In January, Egypt’s President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi ratified a law allowing settlement with the state over building violations, with the exception of those pertaining to safety standards, authorised height or purpose, historic buildings, and others.
The law sets a six-month deadline, which will be reached by the end of this month, to put an end to violations in the country.
Speaking at a press conference on Wednesday, Madbouly vowed to introduce new facilitations for citizens wishing to reconcile with the government regarding these violations to encourage them to speed up the submission of settlement requests.
Unplanned buildings have come to constitute about 50 percent of the urban clusters across the villages and cities countrywide, Madbouly pointed out.
In villages, much agricultural land has been destroyed by the construction of illegal buildings in a scattered and unorganised manner, Madbouly said.
"From the mid-eighties to 2011, random construction came to constitute no less than 70 percent of the urban clusters in Egypt," he said.
The PM said that Egypt lost up to 400,000 feddans between 1980 to 2011, and an additional 90,000 over the past nine years.
"This means we lost a source of food for the Egyptian people, in addition to many job vacancies… and to solve this problem, the state should reclaim other [non-agricultural] spaces," he added.
Madbouly said the cost of reclaiming one feddan is between EGP 150,000 and EGP 200,000, and that the reclamation of 90,000 feddans costs up to EGP 18 billion.
The PM explained that the disorganised nature of construction has also increased the cost of providing Egyptian villages with sewer systems: from EGP 180 billion in 2014 to EGP 300 billion in 2020.
“The cost could have been lower if the buildings were constructed in a planned and organised manner,” he assured.
Madbouly also said that in cities, clusters of red-brick buildings and informal settlements have sprung up. Additional storeys have also been added to existing buildings in violation of permits issued by municipal authorities.
"How can the state supply citizens in these areas with the necessary services?" the PM said during the presser, stressing that any expansion of services takes a heavy toll on the state.
"The state issued the reconciliation law to end the 40-year-old problem and to stop the toll of haphazard construction on Egypt," he said.
The new law is not a punitive measure, but was issued to legalise the state of illegal buildings, Madbouly said, adding that the value of these buildings is expected to increase after the reconciliation measures are finalised.
He stressed that the government is following up on all citizens' complaints in this respect and will ease some procedures, especially those related to the estimated value of reconciliation in some areas, as well as the documents required to submit reconciliation requests.
He urged all citizens to speed up the submission of reconciliation requests to “not lose a great opportunity to maximise the value of their apartments,” revealing that after the government completes its digital transformation system, all apartments will have an official certificate from the state linked to the national ID number of the owners, and all trade in uncertified apartments and buildings will be disallowed.
The prime minister also said that a new set of regulations on construction in cities will be issued following the end of the ongoing suspension of construction.
Municipal authorities were ordered in May to suspend issuing licences for any form of construction for six months, whether for new buildings or for modifications to existing ones, in provinces including Cairo, Giza, Qalioubiya, and Alexandria. The move is part of a government crackdown on illegal buildings across the country.
Madbouly said that under the new regulations, building licences will serve as a form of contract between the government and the building's owner, containing obligations on both sides.
"Any [future] violation will be faced by actions from the state," Madbouly added.
"Our vision is to build a genuine state with proper and planned urbanism equipped with [all necessary] facilities exactly like all developed countries. The government will thus do its best to put an end to this issue [of illegal buildings]."
Egyptian authorities are implementing a nationwide campaign to demolish all illegal buildings that do not meet the requirements of reconciliation stipulated in the law. The government has already announced the removal of thousands of encroachments over the past few months.
“The state has not demolished any occupied buildings, only empty ones,” Madbouly stressed during Wednesday's presser.
In late August, President El-Sisi slammed the building violations in a heated speech, and threatened to deploy the army if the problem persists.

 
.
Egypt will no longer allow building violations in villages and cities, says PM

Unplanned buildings have come to constitute about 50 percent of the urban clusters across villages and cities countrywide


Ahram Online , Wednesday 9 Sep 2020

Mostafa Madbouly

Prime Minister of Egypt Mostafa Madbouly (Al-Ahram)

Egypt's Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly said the Egyptian government will confront any attempt to build in a random manner on state lands to end what he described as "the bleeding of haphazard construction."

Egypt has seen a significant rise in illegal construction since the security vacuum that followed the 2011 uprising, with many people constructing multi-storey buildings without acquiring the necessary permits or complying with engineering safety standards.
In January, Egypt’s President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi ratified a law allowing settlement with the state over building violations, with the exception of those pertaining to safety standards, authorised height or purpose, historic buildings, and others.
The law sets a six-month deadline, which will be reached by the end of this month, to put an end to violations in the country.
Speaking at a press conference on Wednesday, Madbouly vowed to introduce new facilitations for citizens wishing to reconcile with the government regarding these violations to encourage them to speed up the submission of settlement requests.
Unplanned buildings have come to constitute about 50 percent of the urban clusters across the villages and cities countrywide, Madbouly pointed out.
In villages, much agricultural land has been destroyed by the construction of illegal buildings in a scattered and unorganised manner, Madbouly said.
"From the mid-eighties to 2011, random construction came to constitute no less than 70 percent of the urban clusters in Egypt," he said.
The PM said that Egypt lost up to 400,000 feddans between 1980 to 2011, and an additional 90,000 over the past nine years.
"This means we lost a source of food for the Egyptian people, in addition to many job vacancies… and to solve this problem, the state should reclaim other [non-agricultural] spaces," he added.
Madbouly said the cost of reclaiming one feddan is between EGP 150,000 and EGP 200,000, and that the reclamation of 90,000 feddans costs up to EGP 18 billion.
The PM explained that the disorganised nature of construction has also increased the cost of providing Egyptian villages with sewer systems: from EGP 180 billion in 2014 to EGP 300 billion in 2020.
“The cost could have been lower if the buildings were constructed in a planned and organised manner,” he assured.
Madbouly also said that in cities, clusters of red-brick buildings and informal settlements have sprung up. Additional storeys have also been added to existing buildings in violation of permits issued by municipal authorities.
"How can the state supply citizens in these areas with the necessary services?" the PM said during the presser, stressing that any expansion of services takes a heavy toll on the state.
"The state issued the reconciliation law to end the 40-year-old problem and to stop the toll of haphazard construction on Egypt," he said.
The new law is not a punitive measure, but was issued to legalise the state of illegal buildings, Madbouly said, adding that the value of these buildings is expected to increase after the reconciliation measures are finalised.
He stressed that the government is following up on all citizens' complaints in this respect and will ease some procedures, especially those related to the estimated value of reconciliation in some areas, as well as the documents required to submit reconciliation requests.
He urged all citizens to speed up the submission of reconciliation requests to “not lose a great opportunity to maximise the value of their apartments,” revealing that after the government completes its digital transformation system, all apartments will have an official certificate from the state linked to the national ID number of the owners, and all trade in uncertified apartments and buildings will be disallowed.
The prime minister also said that a new set of regulations on construction in cities will be issued following the end of the ongoing suspension of construction.
Municipal authorities were ordered in May to suspend issuing licences for any form of construction for six months, whether for new buildings or for modifications to existing ones, in provinces including Cairo, Giza, Qalioubiya, and Alexandria. The move is part of a government crackdown on illegal buildings across the country.
Madbouly said that under the new regulations, building licences will serve as a form of contract between the government and the building's owner, containing obligations on both sides.
"Any [future] violation will be faced by actions from the state," Madbouly added.
"Our vision is to build a genuine state with proper and planned urbanism equipped with [all necessary] facilities exactly like all developed countries. The government will thus do its best to put an end to this issue [of illegal buildings]."
Egyptian authorities are implementing a nationwide campaign to demolish all illegal buildings that do not meet the requirements of reconciliation stipulated in the law. The government has already announced the removal of thousands of encroachments over the past few months.
“The state has not demolished any occupied buildings, only empty ones,” Madbouly stressed during Wednesday's presser.
In late August, President El-Sisi slammed the building violations in a heated speech, and threatened to deploy the army if the problem persists.

It’s good that they have decided to bring down any building whom they don’t agree to register.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom