Dubai's ceaseless boom is putting strains on its residents
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[January 27, 2025] By
JON GAMBRELL
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Skyscraper-studded Dubai has been on
a hot streak for the last five years — and some residents are starting
to feel burned.
The city-state has seen record-breaking real estate transactions and as
more and more people come to live there, and its state-owned airline
Emirates is booking record earnings. But all that growth comes with
strains for the city's population.
Traffic feels worse than ever on Dubai's roads. The price of housing
continues to spike even with new real estate projects being announced
almost daily. Caught in the middle are both its Emirati citizens and the
vast population of foreigners who power its economy — sparking rare
public expressions of concern.
“Dubai is on steroids but affordability risks are increasing,” warned
Hasnain Malik in a starkly titled report he wrote for the global data
firm Tellimer, where he's a managing director.
Skyrocketing housing prices
Under Dubai's current plans, the city aims to have 5.8 million residents
by 2040, adding more than half its current estimated population in just
15 years. Since 1980, its population has already soared from around
255,000 to around 3.8 million.
Real estate lit the fire in Dubai's growth in 2002, when the desert
sheikdom began allowing foreigners to own property. After sharp falls
during both the 2008-2009 financial crisis and Dubai's brief coronavirus
lockdown, prices have been soaring.
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Today, average prices per square foot are at all-time highs, according
to Property Monitor. Rental prices increased as much as 20% in key
neighborhoods last year, with further rises likely this year, with some
residents moving to communities further out in the desert, the real
estate firm Engel & Völkers said.
Jammed roads
Even before the boom, some people who worked in Dubai chose to live in
the neighboring emirate of Sharjah, some 20 kilometers (12 miles) north
of the city's downtown, or further away. Some 1 million commuters from
other emirates jam the 12-lane Sheikh Zayed Road that runs through the
center of the city and other highways every day, as studies suggest that
as many as four out of five employees drive to work alone.
That traffic has only intensified with Dubai's new arrivals.
While the rest of the world saw as much as a 4% increase in the number
of registered vehicles in the last two years, the city's Road and
Transportation Authority says there's been a 10% increase in the number
of vehicles.
So many vehicles have been registered that the city has had to make
license plates longer.
And while the city keeps building new flyovers and other road
improvements, more cars are coming from more directions than ever
before.
“Dubai is very attractive, more and more people are coming,” said Thomas
Edelmann, the founder and managing director of RoadSafetyUAE, which
advocates about traffic issues. “I think it’s easier to get people
quickly to come to Dubai and to convince them about Dubai, then to build
a new intersection or a new highway.”
Boom concerns also raised by Emiratis
Congestion has got so bad that it's driving even prominent Emiratis to
break their customary silence on public affairs.
Habib Al Mulla, a prominent Emirati lawyer, wrote on the social platform
X in December that while authorities were working on congestion, the
problem demanded “a set of immediate and long-term mechanisms.” He
followed up by publishing an opinion piece twice mentioning “congestion”
as being among “pressing issues" for global cities like Dubai.
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Vehicles ply at a slow pace through a street with Dubai's iconic
skyline in the background, United Arab Emirates, on Dec. 31, 2024.
(AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)
 While phrased in mild language, Al
Mulla’s comments represented rare public criticism in the United
Arab Emirates, where speech is tightly controlled by criminal law
and social norms favor raising issues at a “majlis” — a semiprivate
setting convened by a traditional ruler.
“The concentration of wealth and opportunities created in global
cities may cause income inequality that pushes out lower-income
residents,” Al Mulla warned in the English-language Khaleej Times
newspaper on Jan. 15.
“The problem becomes acute when the wealth and opportunities remain
inaccessible to segments of the national population who witness the
city’s allure being seized by outsiders. This may carry significant
social risks, if not mitigated.”
Then there's demographic concerns as the Emirati share of the
population dwindles. While the number of citizens isn't public, a
back-of-the-envelope, informal calculation shared for years by
experts suggests Emirati citizens represent around 10% of the
country's overall population of more than 9 million people, a number
that's likely falling as foreigners rush in.
In December, sermon scripts issued for the Dec. 13 Friday's prayers
directly touched on the duty of having more children.
“Increasing offspring is both a religious obligation and a national
responsibility, as it contributes to the protection and
sustainability of nations,” the sermon read, according to a
transcript issued by the federal government's General Authority of
Islamic Affairs and Endowments.
A search for high-tech solutions
For Dubai's autocratic government, overseen by ruler Sheikh Mohammed
bin Rashid Al Maktoum, possible solutions to the grinding traffic
have ranged from the practical to the fanciful. The government in
recent months has repeatedly encouraged companies to allow more
remote work options, including in a report released in November that
also suggested staggered and flexible working hours.
Adding as many as five remote workdays a month, along with the other
steps, “can reduce morning peak travel time across Dubai by 30%,”
the study stated.
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Dubai's road toll system, known as Salik, has added gates to charge
drivers more and will institute surge pricing at the end of the
month. Dubai's Metro, which boasts the world's longest self-driving
rail line, will also grow beyond its broadly north-south routes in a
nearly $5 billion expansion.
Then there's the flying taxi project. Since 2017, Dubai has been
announcing plans for airborne cabs in the city. A first “vertiport”
is being built by Dubai International Airport with the aim of
offering the service from next year.
Dubai also plans 3,300 kilometers (2,050 miles) of new pedestrian
paths, although during Dubai's summer months pedestrians have to
contend with high humidity and heat of around 45 degrees Celsius
(113 degrees Fahrenheit).
“In the coming years, residents of Dubai will be able to move around
by walking, cycling, its extensive network of roads and bridges, the
Metro and its new lines, water taxis, or flying taxis on specific
air routes,” Sheikh Mohammed said on X in December.
But for now, Dubai keeps attracting more people and more cars — and
the traffic jams only get longer.
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