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Dubai and Masdar City: A Study in Contrasts

A Tale of Two Cities: City of the Past, City of the Future

By Chris Nelder
Friday, December 4th, 2009

Looking at the world through the lens of energy investing and peak oil, it's hard to imagine a starker contrast than Dubai World and Masdar City.

Both will rise out of a barren wasteland of sand in less than three decades, but only one was designed to survive the future.

Dubai World was built to serve up the ultimate in luxury and decadence: Indoor ski slopes in one of the hottest places in the world. Architecture straight out of a sci-fi novel on three artificial archipelagos built into the sea. Refrigerated beach sand. Floating tennis courts. The world's largest shopping mall, featuring luxury goods, and entertainment. The world's tallest building. Hotels featuring independently rotating floors, or underwater views, or rooms with eight attendants each. And so on, ad nauseam.

Suffice it to say there's a reason why after Never Land, Dubai was the one place in the world that Michael Jackson wanted to call home.

Lacking a significant endowment of oil, Dubai sought to be the financial hub and the Las Vegas of the Middle East. Its revenue is almost entirely derived from high-rent tourism and servicing the enormous flow of petroleum capital generated by its neighbors.

But the gleaming glitter hides a dark underbelly. Those fantasy buildings were constructed on the back of slave labor from places like Ethiopia, Bangladesh, and the Philippines. While Western ex-pats live the high life drinking Moët on the beach and being waited on hand and foot, laborers do backbreaking work in the desert heat, making $5 a day... their passports confiscated, their liberty denied. Subsisting on meager rations and insufficiently desalinated water, they're forced to live in stinking, cramped, unventilated concrete ghettos an hour's bus ride away, conveniently out of sight of the rich patrons.

Convoys of trucks haul sewage out of Dubai every night because the sewer system cannot handle the load. Much of the excess gets dumped illegally into the sea, leading to unsafe, contaminated waters at the very beaches of its ultra-luxury hotels.

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In the long history of empire and the excesses of the rich, there is nothing unusual about any of that of course. All great empires were built on the backs of slaves at one time or another and all committed their eco-sins. My point here is the utter unsustainability of the strategy.

Predictably, the bursting of the global real estate and financial bubbles took the air out of Dubai as well.

condo
An empty villa on Palm Jumeirah. Source: New York Times

Dubai's new flagship hotel, the Atlantis, stands unfinished — its roof leaking and its rooms unwanted — on an enormously expensive artificial island. Its structured financial products, supposedly compliant with Shariah law forbidding the charging of interest, were discovered to be — surprise — not so clean. It's like an echo of the SEC's and rating agencies' complicity in enabling the subprime debacle.

Now Dubai faces sovereign default as collateral damage of the global hallucinated wealth meltdown. The news that Dubai had asked its creditors for a six-month freeze of interest payments on $26 billion in debt related to Dubai World ripped through the financial world, temporarily raising the specter of a domino effect. (The markets quickly shrugged off that fear however, realizing that the damage would be mostly contained and local.)

Masdar: City of the Future

Less than 100 miles away from the broken dream of Dubai World, a new city based on a very different dream is rising in Abu Dhabi. Masdar City aspires to be the world's first carbon-neutral, zero-waste city, a happy oasis six kilometers square with its own micro-climate, supporting 50,000 people in renewably powered harmony with nature.

masdar city
Masdar City birds eye view conception. Source: Masdar City

Built from the ground up with sustainable living in mind, it will bring together the best-of-breed clean technologies: building-integrated solar photovoltaics and solar glass, solar hot water systems, smart grid technology, electric transportation, power storage, sustainable agriculture and vertical farming, water recycling and desalination, low-energy HVAC, green building materials, waste-to-energy systems... essentially everything but wind energy.

The first phase of the project is already under way. Construction of the Masdar Institute, a higher learning institution that will explore new green technologies and shepherd the best ones into commercial development, is slated for completion next year; its courtship of the world's top cleantech companies and investors has commenced. The Institute aims to be a world-class research and development hub for the solutions of the future.

Ironically, Masdar City is the dream of Sheik Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan — the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, one of the most oil-rich emirates in the UAE. Abu Dhabi claims 92 billion barrels of oil reserves, and produces 2.7 million barrels per day of oil — 85% of the UAE's total output. That's a $1.5 billion-a-week revenue stream, and the reason why Abu Dhabi has the world's richest sovereign wealth fund, worth over $700 billion.

But rather than spend it on lavish amusements and trifles as its sister did, Abu Dhabi intends to use its vast oil wealth to invest in the future. The royal family knows better than most that the punch is running low, and the oil party will be over in 30-50 years. Accordingly, it has committed $14 billion — with another $8 billion expected from outside investors — to build Masdar City as part of a 20-30 year effort to transform itself into a high-tech industrial and knowledge economy.

While the world's oil addicts continue to line up for another hit of its dwindling stash, Abu Dhabi will be weaning itself off hydrocarbons, building a semiconductor industry and turning out some of the most advanced renewable and efficiency technologies in the world. In sha' Allah.

Of course there is no guarantee that Masdar City will prove economically viable, particularly amidst a real estate collapse. And there is an exceptionally high risk of technology failure. It could turn out to be a supersized 21st Century equivalent of the failed Biosphere project — mankind's last serious attempt at maintaining an artificial, zero-footprint environment.

Yet, it's almost unimportant whether Masdar City succeeds as the model city of a sustainable future or fails as an expensive boondoggle. As the world's first comprehensive experiment in integrating the whole spectrum of green technologies at a city scale, the results will be invaluably instructive to the reengineering of the rest of the world.

We'll have a much better idea of exactly what technology can (and can't) do. The winners that emerge from the proving ground of Masdar City will be overnight sensations and turn more than a few penny stocks into green chips.

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The Past and The Future

In reality, the men behind both Dubai World and Masdar City are closely related and their investment objectives intertwined. At the very least they share a common interest in securing for themselves a prosperous future as the twilight of oil fades to black.

I have contrasted the two cities sharply to make a larger, and perhaps a moral point.

When one thinks of Dubai today, one conjures Rome... Icarus... Easter Island... the frothy head on a just-poured beer. She is the very image of the Age of Oil, in which the value of every dollar "made" was ultimately derived from cheap and easy petroleum. As oil peaked, her lavish beauty wilted. Now, the wrinkles have appeared, the plastic surgery has become a ghoulish mask, and the enticing sway of her hips has been replaced by a halting limp. Her day is gone.

Whereas Masdar City is like a phoenix, rising from the soot of the fossil fuel age and the ashes of a consumptive, wasteful way of life. She's hot, young, and sexy, and she wants to dance. She stands atop the very heart of the world's remaining oil reserves, offering the hope of a sustainable age after oil. She is the future.

As the excesses of the first half of the Age of Oil gives way to the deprivations of the second half, Masdar City represents humanity's best shot at renewal. May she live long and prosper.

Until next time,

Chris

P.S. Just as Dubai is using Masdar to hedge against the end of oil... you can use it to create vast personal wealth. In a new report, we spell out exactly how to harness the power of Masdar — and all the wealth it will create — for your personal portfolio. Click here to read it now.


Editor's Note: From solar and wind to geothermal and biofuels, Green Chip readers want to know which renewable energy resource will take over where fossil fuels leave off. The answer is...all of the above!

There is no one single solution to today's energy crisis. However, the combination of all viable renewable energy resources, coupled with energy efficiency, conservation and smart grid development will not only lead us to energy independence and a cleaner, more sustainable energy infrastructure — but also to what will soon prove to be the greatest investment opportunity of the 21st Century.







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Comments:

Comment by dick singsank on 2009-12-04
more likely Fox News will take Jeff Siegel to task.
Comment by windfreak on 2009-12-04
While Masdar is a noble goal, it, like Dubai, will be constructed on the backs of de-facto slaves. Having lived in the Emirates for over 2 years, I saw first hand how projects are done. Desperate for work, the slave labor force would toil in temperatures exceeding 50 C, in spite of the official state policy that work above that temperature was not allowed (the "official" reported temperature never exceeded 50 C!).

Comment by Terry Mock on 2009-12-05
Will Civilization Get It Right, This Time?
SLDI Newsletter - July 2009 - http://www.sldi.org/newService/SLDIJuly2009.html

... an awesome film stressing the general unsustainability of current land development practices all over the earth...

...the film HOME makes the point about the need for sustainable land development best practices by comparing the failed historical example of Easter Island to modern day monument-raising practices around the world, culminating in the tallest building in the world in Dubai. The point is that history shows us that civilization has reached its current lofty perch before, only to collapse because of fundamental flaws in our understanding of the true relationship between humans and nature.

This unprecedented technological ability to transfer knowledge around the world now sets the stage for a quantum leap in global consciousness that will hopefully allow our civilization to avoid repeating the mistakes of the past while moving forward towards a sustainable future.

Your participation and comments are welcome.

Terry Mock
Executive Director
Sustainable Land Development International - www.SLDI.org
Comment by GreyBase on 2009-12-07
Both cities are excesses, albeit in their own ways.

The learning that escapes mankind is to live 'within' the guidelines of nature and not try to make every location 'meet' man's visualised wants.

The more near term learning that is waiting to happen is to limit needs and eliminate desires / addictions. As population surges, and as it continues to do, the earth and its resources are not going to expand. So per capita natural resources will reduce. Man needs to learn then to live on less, consume nature less and blend it with a spirit of sharing.

Until then, all such exercises (excesses) will be failures, in different ways.
Comment by Terry Mock on 2009-12-11
Will Abu Dhabi Help Create a Sustainable Dubai?
December 2009 SLDI Newsletter - http://www.sldi.org/newService/SLDIDec2009.html

If ever there was an urban area anywhere on Earth that epitomized the excesses of the boom years between 2002 and 2007, it has to be Dubai. A sign that this large-scale land development extravaganza was veering to unsustainable excess should have been Dubai’s decision to erect a 200-story building that would make it the world’s tallest structure. Other telltale signs should have been Dubai’s determination to build the world’s largest man-made artificial islands as well as a major ski resort in the desert – all developed with dwindling oil reserves, and without a source of sustainable food, fresh water or energy production for its burgeoning class-based society.

Now the financial bubble has burst and Dubai World, the emirate's largest state-owned conglomerate, has requested a "standstill" of subsidiary real estate company Nakheel's bondholders. The crisis in Dubai has gone beyond debt and become one surrounding the credibility of its leadership. Dubai World’s failure to honor its obligations has shaken faith among the international investment community in the emirate’s normally ebullient promotion of over-the-top, land-development practices. Dubai’s oil-rich banker brother, Abu Dhabi, is now in a position to require a price for restoring faith that is likely to be much more than just prudent borrowing and greater transparency. It is likely to be a demand for a restructuring at the top and a return to more sustainable principles.

Less than 100 miles away from the broken dream of Dubai World, a new city based on a very different dream is rising in Abu Dhabi. Being built from the ground up with sustainable living in mind, Masdar City “…will bring together the best-of-breed clean technologies: building-integrated solar photovoltaics and solar glass, solar hot water systems, smart grid technology, electric transportation, power storage, sustainable agriculture and vertical farming, water recycling and desalination, low-energy HVAC, green building materials, waste-to-energy systems... essentially everything but wind energy.”

Hopefully, under Abu Dhabi’s new guiding influence, Dubai will adopt a more sustainable development model that pursues a better balanced, triple-bottom-line return for the long-term benefit of all stakeholders. Earlier in this year of unprecedented crisis and opportunity, SLDI offered to newly-elected US President Barack Obama, and now respectfully submits to the UAE – the World’s 1st Sustainable Land Development Best Practices System that balances and integrates the needs of people, planet and profit into a holistic model that helps land development projects achieve greater success in each area.

Your participation and comments are welcome.

Terry Mock
Executive Director
Sustainable Land Development International
www.SLDI.org