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Nepal/UAE supply chain: Ajman Chamber strengthens bilateral economic ties

Nepal/UAE supply chain: Ajman Chamber strengthens bilateral economic ties

Business news |
By Brian Tristam Williams



The United Arab Emirates’s Ajman Chamber of Commerce and Industry has met a senior Nepalese delegation to explore new trade channels and direct investment, with information technology called out alongside more traditional sectors, according to an official statement.

Sheikh Sultan bin Saqr Al Nuaimi (vice chairman of the chamber) hosted Tej Bahadur Chhetri (Nepal’s ambassador to the UAE) and a business delegation led by Chandra Prasad Dhakal, president of the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FNCCI). Ajman’s director general, Salem Al Suwaidi, also attended.

Nepal/UAE economic ties: what was on the table

The talks covered ways to increase two-way trade and to build a pipeline of investable projects, including opportunities in Ajman’s inland areas of Al Manama and Masfout. Sectors highlighted included electronics, information technology, agriculture, education, tourism, industry, financial services, and retail. A longer full release also notes an invitation for the delegation to visit the emirate and participate in AETEX 2026.

Why Nepal/UAE economic ties matter for tech

For eeNews Europe readers, the interesting bit is the emphasis on information technology and skills development, not just physical trade. The UAE has been leaning into digital infrastructure and automation (as we noted in our look at robotics rollouts in the UAE), which tends to pull demand for engineers, software capability and training capacity.

If the Ajman side follows through with joint forums and structured deal pipelines, the practical outcomes to watch are: cross-border partnerships in software and managed services, regional training programmes linked to local employers, and more small-to-mid-sized investment deals rather than headline megaprojects. Ajman/Nepal economic ties will now hinge on whether the promised business-to-business forums happen quickly enough to convert goodwill into bankable projects.

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