Recently, Libya's Ministry of Industry and Minerals held a key meeting in its office in Misrata, focusing on the preparation of a modern cement plant submitted by the Hungarian Rotary International Ltd. Mustafa Samu, Deputy Minister in charge, personally combed the project concept face to face with Hungarian representatives, emphasizing that the proposed new plant must adopt "zero pollution" technology, which not only fills the gap in the local market, but also minimizes the proportion of imported cement, so that "Libya Construction" can truly use "Made in Libya". During the
talks, the two sides extended the topic from the paper plan to the landing mechanism: how to take the building materials industry as the entry point, twist foreign capital, technology, local resources and labor into a rope, and form a sustainable industrial investment ecology. Samu repeatedly reminded that Libya is making every effort to reshape its local manufacturing industry, and that any foreign partner willing to cultivate the Libyan market will be escorted by a "one-stop" policy. At the end of
the meeting, Samu praised Rotary's courage of "daring to be the first to eat crabs" by name, and reiterated that the door of the Ministry of Industry and Minerals has always been open to overseas investors with experience and environmental protection responsibilities, expecting more similar projects to come one after another to make up for Libya's industrial shortcomings one by one.