Home » Smart Cities » Dubai Cleanest City Title Secured for Sixth Straight Year
News Desk -

Share

Dubai has retained its position as the world’s cleanest city for the sixth consecutive year, according to the Global Power City Index issued by the Mori Memorial Foundation’s Institute for Urban Strategies. The recognition reinforces Dubai’s global leadership in quality of life, sustainability, and urban excellence.

The achievement reflects Dubai’s long-term vision to develop a clean, healthy, and sustainable urban environment. The strategy places people and community wellbeing at the centre of planning, development, and city management. As a result, the emirate continues to maintain advanced standards of urban living while strengthening its global competitiveness as one of the world’s most attractive cities to live, work, and visit.

In the latest assessment, Dubai recorded a 100 percent satisfaction score in the city cleanliness indicator under the Environment pillar of the Global Power City Index. Consequently, the city outperformed several major global cities evaluated across multiple measures of urban performance.

The Global Power City Index is considered one of the world’s leading benchmarks for measuring urban competitiveness. It evaluates cities across six key functions: quality of life, environment, economy, research and development, cultural interaction, and accessibility. These rankings are based on more than 70 international indicators.

Meanwhile, the recognition highlights the sustained efforts of Dubai Municipality to improve public health standards and enhance the urban environment. The municipality continues to maintain the aesthetic character of the city through integrated cleanliness operations, sustainable urban planning, and the development of public facilities, parks, beaches, and community spaces.

In addition, Dubai Municipality’s initiatives align with the objectives of the Steering Committee for Preserving the Urban Appearance of Dubai. These include performance indicators under the Public Cleanliness Index, which monitors the cleanliness of streets and public facilities in line with the highest international standards.

Furthermore, the city’s efforts support the Dubai Integrated Waste Management Strategy 2041. The strategy aims to reduce waste generation at its source, divert 100 percent of waste from landfills, and accelerate the transition toward a circular economy.

His Excellency Marwan Ahmed bin Ghalita, Director General of Dubai Municipality, said the achievement reflects a clear vision supported by sustained institutional efforts and strong partnerships between government entities, the private sector, and the community. He noted that cleanliness in Dubai has evolved into an established urban culture that reflects the awareness and responsibility of society. According to him, it directly contributes to improving quality of life for residents and families while reinforcing the emirate’s reputation as one of the most beautiful, sustainable, and liveable cities globally.

At the operational level, Dubai Municipality maintains a comprehensive cleanliness system that runs around the clock. The system is supported by a modern fleet of 785 vehicles, purpose-built machinery, and specialised equipment. Moreover, more than 23,300 waste storage and collection units are distributed across residential and public areas.

The operations are managed by 2,876 sanitation engineers and 280 supervisory and inspection personnel working within an integrated operational framework. Together, they support an extensive urban network that covers 2,400 kilometres of main roads and highways and 1,419 kilometres of investment zones. The system also serves 33.4 kilometres of water canals, in addition to markets, beaches, residential communities, industrial zones, and desert areas.

At the same time, Dubai Municipality continues to introduce pioneering initiatives in integrated waste management. One of the key programmes is the Circle Dubai initiative, which promotes waste reduction, recycling, and circular economy practices through community participation.

The municipality also manages the Warsan Waste-to-Energy Centre, the largest facility of its kind globally. In addition, smart community recycling centres and advanced digital platforms support real-time monitoring and operational decision-making through the Clean City Index system.

Collaborative frameworks with private sector partners further strengthen residential waste collection, transport, and recycling services. These partnerships are supported by community engagement programmes such as the “One Hour with a Sanitation Engineer” initiative.

Overall, the continued recognition of Dubai cleanest city status reflects an integrated urban vision that positions cleanliness as a core pillar of sustainability, attractiveness, and economic prosperity.