Qatar Airways CEO addresses policymakers and government officials in Washington

Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al Baker shared his insights on Qatar's impact in the GCC's thriving aviation sector during a keynote address at the 21st Annual Arab-US Policy Makers Conference.
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Above:  Dr. John Duke Anthony, Founding President and Chief Executive Officer of the National Council on US - Arab Relations, listens intently as Akbar Al Baker addresses guests at the 21st Annual Arab-US Policy Makers Conference in Washington.  

Addressing policymakers, students, intelligence officials and governmental leaders, the airline boss spoke of how the carrier was increasingly playing a pivotal role in the State of Qatar’s economic growth.

He also spoke of the importance of Qatar’s geographical position in the prosperous GCC region, comprising of neighbouring Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Kingdom of Bahrain, Sultanate of Oman and United Arab Emirates.

Al Baker was speaking at the 21st Annual Arab-US Policy Makers Conference in the US capital on the subject ‘Unprecedented Emergence of the Aviation Sector in the GCC’.

Other speakers included His Excellency Mohamed bin Abdulla Al-Rumaihi, Ambassador of the State of Qatar to the United States; HRH Prince Turki Al Faisal Al Sa’ud of Saudi Arabia, former Saudi Ambassador to the United States; and the Honourable Jose W. Fernandez, the current United States Assistant Secretary of State for Economic, Energy, and Business Affairs.

Al Baker said the GCC region stood apart as a powerful base in global aviation, spurring new alliances, international route expansion and uncompromising service standards. The GCC’s draw as a tourist destination and economic hub continued to fuel the region’s unprecedented growth on the world stage, he stressed.

He spoke of how the rapid rise of Qatar’s national carrier Qatar Airways had developed an economic vehicle spreading the wings of the nation to countries around the world.

He said that aviation was a key component of the economic backbone of Qatar and that the country’s national airline had been highly instrumental in transforming Doha into an international business destination and, increasingly, a tourist centre.

Al Baker’s speech also covered Qatar’s confident outlook on the future, as directed by Qatar’s Instrumental National Vision 2030 with its four pillars for sustainability – economic, social, human, and environmental.

“At Qatar Airways and in Qatar we want to nurture a continuation of the region’s growth. One of the best ways to accomplish this is to link Doha with as many global gateways as possible,” said Al Baker.

“We believe that by being a global connector, we act as an enabler; a purveyor of economic growth, bringing people and businesses closer together.”

During his speech, Al Baker earmarked the close relationship Qatar and the GCC countries shared with the United States of America.

“US exports to Qatar include aircraft, machinery, cars, trucks and agricultural products, as well as universities with American educational establishments in Qatar.  Hundreds of Qataris study at US academic institutions every year, both in campuses in Qatar and across the United States.

“We look forward to even more US investment in Qatar as we move forward with a National Development Strategy which is designed to improve infrastructure, real estate and medical facilities over the next decade and is funded in part from the expanding tourism and conference industry which is made possible, again, by Qatar Airways,” he added.

Al Baker also spoke about Qatar Airways’ involvement in GTL (Gas to Liquids) projects in Doha which will not only support Qatar’s own environmental initiatives, but the entire world since the fuel that will be developed can be exported and used by other airlines.