Vehicles drive in a flooded road following heavy rains in Dubai on April 17, 2024.
Giuseppe Cacace | Afp | Getty Photographs
Hussain Sajwani, the chairman of Damac Properties, one of many United Arab Emirate’s largest non-public actual property builders, sought to downplay the severity of flooding within the nation earlier this month, saying there have been solely “pockets of issues.”
On April 16, the usually dry desert nation within the Gulf was pummeled with roughly a 12 months’s price of rain in lower than a day, greater than it has ever seen in a single storm since data for the UAE started in 1949.
Flash floods that shaped led to water engulfing automobiles, in some areas absolutely submerging them, main a whole lot of drivers to desert their automobiles on roads to flee the rising water ranges. The deluge additionally closed faculties and companies, grounded a whole lot of flights, and destroyed automobiles, companies and different property. It threw day by day life into chaos as many residents misplaced energy and working water or have been trapped both inside their properties or in airports, or wherever they occurred to be when the storm hit.
Damac’s Sajwani conceded there was chaos on the airport, however mentioned the UAE had recovered a lot sooner than different nations would have.
“I feel the topic was overexaggerated, actually,” he informed CNBC’s Dan Murphy on Sunday, talking on the World Financial Discussion board’s “Particular Assembly on World Collaboration, Development and Vitality for Improvement” in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
“Effective, we get some, in one of many malls, some harm. But when the mall is 3 million sq. ft … and if a 100 meter leakage or no matter occurs — it isn’t the tip of the world and it was mounted the following day.”
He defined that he arrived in Dubai from London just some hours after the rains had stopped, and visited all the main properties that belong to his firm.
Visitors diverts away from a flooded road in Sharjah on April 20, 2024, after the heaviest rainfall on document within the UAE.
Ahmed Ramzan | Afp | Getty Photographs
“There have been pockets of issues, I am not saying no, however it was overly exaggerated … Any nation, I imply, you see floods and issues like that occur in Miami repeatedly and homes get destroyed and other people get evacuated. That is as we speak with the surroundings altering. All over the place on the earth you are getting these sorts of storms, OK, and Dubai has been hit with that. However they managed it very nicely,” he mentioned.
He later added he did not see that classes needed to be discovered because it was an uncommon storm. “It hadn’t hit the nation for 75 years,” he mentioned.
The UAE’s Nationwide Heart of Meteorology mentioned that jap components of the nation measured as much as 250 millimeters — 10 inches — of rain in lower than 24 hours. In contrast, in a full 12 months the UAE usually sees 5.5 to eight inches of rainfall per 12 months.
Because of a scarcity of drainage infrastructure and the truth that the nation’s city areas are paved over, a lot of the water had nowhere to go, exacerbating the flooding in lots of areas.
The nation’s cleanup efforts are nonetheless ongoing. One multistory residence constructing close to the border of Dubai and the emirate of Sharjah cracked and tilted over resulting from structural harm from the storm, and was absolutely evacuated as a result of it was in peril of collapsing.
Some Dubai builders reportedly supplied free repairs and vowed to take motion after the document rainfall. Damac informed Al Arabiya English that it had labored across the clock with the native authorities authorities to assist residents, deploying a number of tankers to gather floodwaters.
A Damac official additionally informed the information outlet that its upcoming developments had not been impacted by the flooding. Chatting with CNBC, Sajwani mentioned that his agency’s properties have been largely left unaffected and it “virtually had no incidents” — however could not affirm whether or not residents would obtain compensation.
“The nice factor we did a) our infrastructure has been executed, in my opinion, higher than a couple of others. The opposite factor is, two days earlier than the storm come — as a result of the warning was there — I had a Zoom [call] from London with our administration. And we agreed to place an motion plan. And we took an excellent motion plan. So we have been prepared for it.”
“We had zero impression. I imply zero impression. I am telling you 98% of our models, perhaps extra, have been intact,” he added.
—CNBC’s Natasha Turak contributed to this text.