The Syqora Journal: Inside Syria’s Next Chapter
Timely insights from the frontlines of Syria’s reopening. From infrastructure and energy to retail and real estate, Syqora’s Journal explores the high-impact opportunities reshaping the country’s business landscape — and how global companies can lead.

Written by
Syqora Group
Syria’s recovery isn’t about returning to what was lost — it’s about building something better. As ministries move from survival to strategy, the focus is shifting toward modern systems: smart utilities, digital infrastructure, and scalable, tech-driven public services. And the companies best positioned to lead this transformation? American firms with proven technologies and regional ambition.
Modern Problems Need Modern Infrastructure
Electricity, telecom, water, transportation — these aren’t just hard assets. They’re now platforms for innovation. Ministries are beginning to adopt longer-term thinking: how to build smarter, more efficient systems that leapfrog past outdated models and align with regional best practices.
U.S. companies offering smart metering, renewable integration, telecom switching, digital identity tools, and infrastructure analytics are now in high demand. What once felt out of reach is now being pulled into the center of planning conversations — especially for cities like Damascus and Latakia, where national development is being closely tied to modernization goals.
From Opportunity to Access
Getting invited to the table is where most companies struggle. That’s where Syqora comes in.
We identify project scopes before they go public, match them to aligned partners, and manage everything from ministry introductions to bid submission and regulatory navigation. Our advantage is not just in knowing where the projects are — but in knowing when they’re actually moving.
Current openings include:
Municipal smart grid upgrades
Public health digitization projects
Smart surveillance and city infrastructure pilots
Industrial data infrastructure and fiber optic expansion
These aren’t speculative ideas. These are in planning now — and they need vetted execution partners.
U.S. Innovation, Syrian Impact
Bringing American tech into Syria isn’t about selling products — it’s about building presence. Companies that invest early in physical setup, localized solutions, and strategic partnerships will be the ones that scale as national needs grow. This is not a one-project market. It’s a foundational shift.
“At first, we thought we were just shipping equipment,” said one U.S. supplier who recently landed a pilot program through Syqora. “Now we’re advising the city on how to build their digital backbone.”
That’s the opportunity: not just to enter, but to shape what’s coming.
And for U.S. companies with solutions and ambition — Syria is ready.