South Korea, UAE sign deal to slash import duties at leaders’ summit 

  • 5/29/2024
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SEOUL: South Korea and the UAE signed a trade pact on Wednesday to sharply cut import duties at a summit of their leaders that pledged closer business and investment ties. Host South Korea welcomed the UAE’s President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan with a traditional honour guard and a flypast of air force jets. “The special bond between the two leaders serves as an opportunity to deepen and advance the two countries’ special strategic partnership,” the office of President Yoon Suk Yeol said in a statement. The summit, which follows Yoon’s state visit last year to Abu Dhabi, focused on energy and defense, as South Korea seeks to tap the investment potential of the energy-rich Gulf state. In its statement, Yoon’s office said the UAE reaffirmed last year’s pledge of $30 billion in investment for South Korean businesses, in areas from nuclear power and defense to hydrogen and solar energy. The two sides also signed an agreement to boost investment flows into future-focused sectors in South Korea’s economy, it added. The Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. signed a letter of intent for a South Korean company to build at least six LNG carriers valued at about $1.5 billion, it said. The industry ministers formally signed a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement agreed in October that will remove all tariffs on South Korean arms exports when it is ratified, South Korea said. The UAE will also drop import duty on automobiles over the next decade, during which South Korea’s tariffs on crude oil imports are to be removed. The deal will eventually scrap tariffs on more than 90 percent of the imports of both. On Tuesday, Sheikh Mohammed met the leaders of some of South Korea’s top conglomerates including Jay Y. Lee of Samsung Electronics, SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won and Kim Dong-kwan of Hanwha Group, which has emerged as a major defense contractor. No new arms deal was unveiled, but Yoon’s office said both aim to boost long-term cooperation of their defense industries. South Korea has signed a series of global defense equipment contracts as part of its plans to become the world’s fourth-largest defense exporter by 2027. One such recent deal involves Poland, which seeks to bolster its defense as a close neighbor of Ukraine, which is at war with Russia.

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