DUBAI: șÚÁÏÉçÇű offers an âextraordinary opportunityâ for Irish firms looking to invest in everything from technology to tourism, according to Irelandâs minister for enterprise, trade and employment.
Appearing on the Arab News current-affairs show âFrankly Speaking,â Simon Coveney singled out the Gulf region as a âreally good example of how international trade can create wealth, can create employment, and also can ultimately provide stability and an absence of conflict.â
As part of a Gulf tour, Coveney recently paid a visit to Riyadh to meet with Majid Al-Qasabi, șÚÁÏÉçÇűâs minister of commerce, and other high-level officials.
âThe main topic of discussion was Saudi ambition, in terms of the vision for 2030, the extraordinary scale of project development that is currently happening in the Kingdom of șÚÁÏÉçÇű,â he told Katie Jensen, the host of âFrankly Speaking.â
âWhether thatâs on the Red Sea coast in terms of tourism, or whether itâs the scale of development in terms of some of the other projects around șÚÁÏÉçÇű, and the opportunity for international business that comes from that.
âWhether itâs construction, whether itâs technology, whether itâs energy, whether itâs transport and tourism, whether itâs medtech and the pharmaceutical industry.â

Irelandâs minister for enterprise, trade and employment, Simon Coveney, being interviewed by Frankly Speaking host Katie Jensen. (AN photo)
He added: âAll of these sectors are very, very strong in Ireland. We have a lot of capacity. Ireland has become a very globalized economy, and some of the largest companies in the world, in many of these sectors already have a very large international presence in Ireland.â
The primary focus of Coveneyâs visit to the region was the World Trade Organizationâs 13th Ministerial Conference, which took place between Feb. 26 and 29 in the UAE capital, Abu Dhabi.
There, trade ministers discussed a new dispute-resolution mechanism designed to even the playing field between larger and smaller economies.
Ireland is keen to see reforms to ensure that the WTO is able to meet the challenges of the modern economy, including a boost for digital trade â known as e-commerce â and stronger action on climate change â issues the body has been slow to adapt to.
âIreland, like every small country, wants to see the WTO working, because the WTO and its dispute-resolution mechanisms and support programs is in many ways the great leveler to allow small countries to trade under agreed rules with larger countries and larger blocs of countries,â he said.
âIreland is a big believer in the WTO as a basis for international trade. But like many others, weâve been somewhat frustrated at the inability of the WTO membership to get agreement on certain things.
âWeâre trying to get agreement on a functioning dispute-resolution mechanism so that small and large countries can operate under the same rules. And if they donât, thereâs a mechanism that countries can refer to, to get a resolution to breakdowns.â
However, Coveney said the prevailing climate of protectionism meant that very few breakthroughs were made in the talks, adding that the apparent âretreatâ of globalization provides little room for positivity.