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World's longest arch bridge in Dubai (plans for next megaproject)
XPressNews ^
| January 29, 2008
| Derek Baldwin
Posted on 01/29/2008 10:10:02 AM PST by Squidpup
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To: ddtorquee
$100 a barrel of oil buys plenty of toys (not to mention bombs, madrassahs, and board seats in US companies)It sure will! Unfortunately, Dubai doesn't have any oil.
21
posted on
01/29/2008 10:29:59 AM PST
by
Drew68
To: thackney
That’s weird. I thought I heard some talking head on CNBC say that the UAE’s wealth was primarily in natgas. I wonder who I’m confusing it with?
22
posted on
01/29/2008 10:30:44 AM PST
by
1rudeboy
To: Paleo Conservative
Interesting that a lady is in such a high position in this part of the world, I thought.
23
posted on
01/29/2008 10:30:49 AM PST
by
Squidpup
("Fight the Good Fight")
To: Squidpup
Nothing wrong with that or the bridge either.
24
posted on
01/29/2008 10:31:50 AM PST
by
RightWhale
(oil--the world currency)
To: Squidpup
Woo! Time to pay Dubai another visit soon.
To: 1rudeboy
Lebanon and Jordan are the only two Middle East Countries that produce no oil. However, some like Israel and Bahrain produce very little.
26
posted on
01/29/2008 10:35:50 AM PST
by
thackney
(life is fragile, handle with prayer)
To: chopperman
And I’ve been on both and the dive down and up the New River Gorge over the old bridge is neat. The steel arch was built in 1974. They use to park rail cars full of coal on the old bridge (not shown) to hold it in place when the New was up into flood stage.
27
posted on
01/29/2008 10:43:48 AM PST
by
RSmithOpt
(Liberalism: Highway to Hell)
To: utherdoul
I suppose you have to spend billions of oil dollars on something but why not spend it on making your country marginally habitable? (greening the desert like Israel) as opposed to builidng bridges and shopping malls with skiing hills in them.Dubai isn't a country. It is an "Emirate" or city/state. The 15% of natives live pretty much a life of leisure. If they work at all, it is in very cushy white-collar professions. The other 85% of the population are foreign workers from all over the world. They stay and work in Dubai for a few years, return home and reapply for work visas. Dubai's shopping malls are the most extravagant in the world and "shopping tourists" pump billions into Dubai's economy each year.
Dubai is doing very well for itself. No reason to change. For the record, there are plenty of trees in Dubai.
28
posted on
01/29/2008 10:44:43 AM PST
by
Drew68
To: Drew68
Unfortunately, Dubai doesn't have any oil. Although the fields are getting small in reserves, Dubai Petroleum Company (established 1966) operates the offshore oil fields of Dubai. Those fields are Fateh, Southwest Fateh, Falah and Rashid.
29
posted on
01/29/2008 10:46:28 AM PST
by
thackney
(life is fragile, handle with prayer)
To: utherdoul
Why green the country when you can pave it over? They can import all their food and frankly what they’re during will ensure they have a future after oil.
30
posted on
01/29/2008 10:46:49 AM PST
by
Raymann
To: Squidpup
Dubai - actually, the entire UAE - is VERY liberal compared to the rest of the Middle East. Much like Lebanon. The princes and governments of the UAE are also very smart - they aren’t just wasting the money they are getting, they are working on making the UAE not only a playground for the rich (think Monaco, Bahamas), but the Wall Street of the Middle East - the financial and information hub of that region.
the UAE is actually pretty nice, as far as the Middle East goes...
31
posted on
01/29/2008 10:49:47 AM PST
by
PugetSoundSoldier
(Complaining about the sting of truth is the defense of the indefensible.)
To: thackney
There is a lot of exploration going on in Israel. The lowest point on earth is at the dead sea.
The oil pools in Israel tie into the arab oil pools and since they are lower than the arab pools, will have the benefit of having the arab oil seep down into the Israeli wells as Israel begins drawing a lot of oil out.
The oil is one reason the arabs want to destroy Isarel along with their eternal ancestral struggles. Whoever conquers Israel will inherit the oil.
32
posted on
01/29/2008 10:55:01 AM PST
by
dglang
To: dglang
Did I miss your sarcasm tag?
33
posted on
01/29/2008 10:57:40 AM PST
by
thackney
(life is fragile, handle with prayer)
To: Squidpup
34
posted on
01/29/2008 11:03:46 AM PST
by
steel_resolve
(If you can't stand behind our troops, then please stand in front...)
To: Drew68
It sure will! Unfortunately, Dubai doesn't have any oil.
Dubai is part of the UAE.
"Oil and gas production has been the mainstay of the economy in the UAE and will remain a major revenue earner long into the future, due to the vast hydrocarbon reserves at the countrys disposal. Proven recoverable oil reserves are currently put at 98.2 billion barrels or 9.5 percent of the global crude oil proven reserves. As for natural gas, the proven recoverable reserves are estimated currently at 5.8 billion cubic meters or 4 percent of the world total. This means that the UAE possesses the third largest natural gas reserves in the region and the fourth largest in the world. "
http://www.uae.gov.ae/Government/oil_gas.htm
If you want to look only at Dubai instead of the whole country:
"Dubais oil reserves have reduced over the past decade and are now expected to be exhausted within 20 years. The main fields are offshore: Fateh, Southwest Fateh and two smaller fields, Falah and Rashid. The only onshore deposit is the Margham field. Dubai Petroleum Company (DPC) is the main operator. Dubai has a 2 per cent share of the UAE's gas reserves. Dubais Margham gas/condensate field can deliver up to 140 mn cfd for domestic use and offshore fields can provide another 100 mn cfd. Sharjah also supplies Dubai with 430 mn cfd through a pipeline installed in 1992. The state-owned Dubai Natural Gas Company (DUGAS) is responsible for processing natural gas produced in Dubais offshore oil fields as well as the gas piped from Sharjah." http://www.uae.gov.ae/Government/oil_gas.htm
"The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is an important oil producer with the fifth largest proven oil reserves in the Middle East. The UAE is a member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) since joining in 1967. The emirate of Abu Dhabi is the center of the oil and gas industry, followed by Dubai, Sharjah, and Ras al Khaimah. In 2004, natural gas supplied 64 percent of the countrys total energy consumption, and oil supplied the remaining 36 percent...the country remains dependent on oil revenue, and the government has announced large oil production capacity increases within the next seven years. Abu Dhabi is the major hydrocarbon and industrial power while Dubai is the trading, financial, and tourist center of the emirates. Abu Dhabi and Dubai account for 80 percent of the UAEs income. Hydrocarbon revenues account for around one-third of the UAEs GDP, though the non-oil finance and service sectors in Dubai are making the city a favored base for multinational corporations in the Gulf. " http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/UAE/Background.html
To: Squidpup
Interesting that a lady is in such a high position in this part of the world, I thought. Dubai is pretty modern and western-friendly.
Nearby Sharjah, however, is not.
36
posted on
01/29/2008 11:19:38 AM PST
by
Allegra
(A chicken in every pot and a pair of new socks every day.)
To: steel_resolve
“BOMB MAGNET”
...Besides the initial not guilty thought, that is exactly what I was thinking...Sadly I might add.
37
posted on
01/29/2008 11:21:41 AM PST
by
never4get
(We are all born ignorant, but one must work hard to remain stupid)
To: Squidpup
Maitha Bin Adai is a skilled engineer. Also, a babe, at least based on the photo shown here. Kudos to the Emirate for being a truly forward-looking Arab state.
38
posted on
01/29/2008 11:23:37 AM PST
by
B-Chan
(Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
To: chopperman
Though taken in Clifton Forge on the Jackson, The Creek can get up a little:
There are double track in many place along The Gorge, especially at the bridge; now owned by Chessie Rail Systems the old Chesapeake & Ohio. The C&O was the only railroad during the Great Depression to make profit and expand during that time because of their ability to haul coal out W. Va and Ky and Va. The C&O was a major key player during WWII and the goods they hauled (timber, coal, and chemicals).
Before the new bridge was built, motorist would take 45 minutes or longer to go in and come out over the old bridge. If it were snowing, 2 hrs or better.
OK I'm a train nut:
C&O H-8 #1648 AT HANDLEY, WV TERMINAL WITH ROAD ENGINES AND SWITCHERS PRESENT JUL 1955. ROAD ENGINES ARE JUST OUT OF STORAGE DUE TO UPSURGE IN COAL TRAFFIC PHOTO BY GENE HUDDLESTON
39
posted on
01/29/2008 11:24:27 AM PST
by
RSmithOpt
(Liberalism: Highway to Hell)
To: Squidpup
Beautiful. Thanks for posting this, Squidpup.
40
posted on
01/29/2008 11:25:56 AM PST
by
Miss Behave
(Beloved daughter of Miss Creant, super sister of danged Miss Ology, and proud mother of Miss Hap.)
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