Dubai may soon unveil a big project from Burj Khalifa, Tim Clarke of Emirates says World News

As long as a city manufactures the world’s tallest tower, he commands the sky with the world’s largest airline, and is located itself as a global nerve center of commerce, technology and lifestyle, mostly the work will consider. But Dubai is not mostly cities. And some people understand that the chairman of the Emirates is better than Sir Tim Clarke, who has spent four decades, which has seen the city growing in whatever it is today. Now, he is indicating that the story is over.In a clear conversation with the British Broadcaster Pierce Morgan, Sir Timothy Charles Clarke, a man running the Emirates Airline since 2003 suggested that Dubai’s next task could also accept the Burj Khalifa. Clarke said, “I dare that there are other things that are coming together that are bigger and more beautiful than the Burj Khalifa – we don’t know,” Clarke said with a smile, suggesting that Dubai’s development is far from slowing down the trajectory. At the age of 75, Clarke’s perspective is unique. He is not a witness to Metamorphosis of Dubai in the last four decades, he is inherent in it. Helping the Emirates Airline in global dominance from its early days, his journey has shown the city.Most of the reflection of Clarke with Morgan has not only been achieved by Dubai, but how, and why. There is a clear strategy behind glass and steel, according to the size of the leadership decision that it is beyond the limited fossil fuel reserves. “If you look at the broad base of GDP and economy and several sections, whether it is media, technology, aviation, hospitality, or banking, it is all here,” Clarke said.He continued, “Somebody had to think that in fact, if I am going to work it, not only I should not only geographically put a place on the map with some iconic things, but I have also got the city to come in a significant mass, where it is going to develop money for the government, but it should also work for all the citizens of Dubai.”In those words, Clarke made it clear: Dubai’s change has never been about the spectacle alone. The intention was always to generate tangible, inclusive economic values and to do so on the scale.The Dubai Media Office, which shared parts of the interview on X (East Twitter), exposed how much Dubai had grounded in a short time. In the early days of the Emirates, Clarke admitted that he could not live to the entire extent of Dubai’s trajectory. “Since the early 90s, the city has been on steroids,” he said, a phrase for a place that went into execution with ambition to tireless velocity. However, this speed was not chaotic. It was deliberately. “What the ruler said, no, we should invest our money in this city and use the money that was part of the model to develop this city,” Clarke shared. Dubai’s leadership chose renovation as its engine, ensuring that the city’s money was reinstated in its development, a step that outlined its development from Desert Port to World City.Known to suppress his subjects, Pierce Morgan noted Dubai’s ambitious scale, “the greatest and best in the world as soon as possible.” Clarke did not flinch. This drive, he said, is part of the city’s operating DNA. But he was in a hurry to emphasize that none of it had been accidental. The growth of the city has been “directed and stear”, ensuring that Dubai does not form in the words of Clarke, “a huge and indirect metropolis.,What is next, some potentially “greater and more beautiful than the Burj Khalifa”, not just promotion. They are still a glimpse in a city. With the insight of Clarke, it is clear that the future of Dubai, much more like its past, is more than only bold thoughts. It is repeatedly powered by an unbreakable commitment to execution, vision and reinforcement.