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UAE at a Glance

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is a federation of seven emirates that was formed in December 2, 1971. UAE occupies a total area of about 83,600 square kilometers (32,400 square miles), along the south-eastern tip of the Arabian Peninsula between 22°50 and 26°N and between 51° and 56°25 E. Qatar lies to the west and north-west, Saudi Arabia to the west and south and Oman to the north, east and south-east.


Map Courtesy: Virtual Tourist

Country Name

Conventional Long Form: United Arab Emirates
Local Long Form (Arabic): Dawlat Al Imarat Al Arabiyya Al Muttahidah
Local Short Form (Arabic): Al Imarat
Abbreviation: UAE


Emirates

Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman, Umm al-Qaiwain, Ras al-Khaimah and Fujairah

 

Capital

Abu Dhabi

 

National Day

Independence Day (from UK), 2 December (1971)

 

President

HH Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan (3 November 2004)

 

Vice-President & Prime Minister

HH Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum (5 January 2006)

 

Political System

A federation with specific areas of authority constitutionally assigned to the UAE Federal Government and other powers reserved for member emirates

 

Constitution

Adopted provisionally on 2 December 1971, made permanent in 1996

 

Area

83,600 square kilometers

 

Time

UAE Standard Time is 4 hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT+4)

 

International Dialing Code

+971

 

Currency

Emirati Dirham (Dh or AED), divided into 100 Fils

 

Exchange Rate

US$ 1 = AED 3.6725
The UAE Dirham has been officially pegged to the US dollar since February 2002

 

Language

The official language is Arabic. English is widely understood and ranks alongside Arabic as the language of commerce

 

Religion

Islam. Practice of all religious beliefs is allowed

 

Population

4.106 million (December, 2005)

 

GDP

AED 485.5 billion (2005, Current Prices)

 

Real GDP Growth

8.2% (2005)

 

Non-Oil Sector Contribution to Nominal GDP

64% (2005)

 

Foreign Direct Investment

US$10 billion (2005)

 

Industries

Oil & Gas, Aluminum, Cement, Fertilizers, Commercial Ship Repair, Petrochemicals, Construction Materials, Pharmaceuticals, Tourism

 

Oil Production

2.8 million barrels per day

 

Oil Proven Reserves

98.1 billion barrels

 

Natural Gas Production

65 billion cubic meters

 

Natural Gas Proven Reserves

6 trillion cubic meters

 

Fiscal Year

1 January to 31 December

 

Weekend

Friday and Saturday for government institutions. Many private companies operate a six-day week (with Friday as an off day)

 

Exports

AED 424 billion (2005)

 

Free-Zone Exports

AED 63.9 billion (2005)

 

Re-Exports

AED 139.5 billion (2005)

 

Imports

AED 261.2 billion (2005)

 

Cultivated Areas

260,000 hectares, 3.1% of total territory

 

Number of Date Palms

Over 40 million

 

Agriculture & Fisheries Products

Dates, Green Fodder, Vegetables and Fruit; Livestock, Poultry, Eggs, Dairy Products; Fish

 

Estimated Fisheries Catch

97,574 tons

 

Flag

Three equal horizontal bands of green (top), white, and black with a wider vertical red band on the hoist side

Climate:

The UAE lies in the arid tropical zone extending across Asia and North Africa. Climatic conditions in the area are strongly influenced by the Indian Ocean, since the country borders both the Arabian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman. This explains why high temperatures in summer are always accompanied by high humidity along the coast. There are noticeable variations in climate between the coastal regions, the deserts of the interior, and mountainous areas.

From November to March daytime temperatures average a very pleasant 24° C (75° F). Night-time temperatures are slightly cooler, averaging 13° C (56° F) and less than 5° C (40° F) in the depths of the desert or high in the mountains. Summer temperatures are high, and can be as high as 48° C (118° F) inland, but it is lower by few degrees in coastal. Humidity in coastal areas averages between 50 and 60 per cent, touching over 90 per cent in summer and autumn. Inland it is far less humid.

Local north-westerly winds (shamal) frequently develop during the winter, bringing cooler windy conditions. Prevailing winds, which are influenced by the monsoons, vary between south or south-east, to west or north to north-west, depending upon the season and location.

Average rainfall is low at less than 6.5 centimeters annually, more than half of which falls in December and January.
Water temperatures in the Gulf exceed 33°C in summer, falling in winter to 16°C in the north and 22–24°C in the south.

 

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