Glitzy Dubai eyes profit in setting Islamic standards

* Halal goods and services become global consumer segment

* Certification fragmented around the world

* Dubai mounts drive to profit from setting standards

* Leverages international trade, finance links

By Bernardo Vizcaino and Mirna Sleiman

DUBAI, Nov 20 (Reuters) - From cosmetics to accommodation, travel to toothpaste, complying with religious principles is becoming big business in the Muslim world, and Dubai, better known for flamboyance and unrestrained consumerism than Islamic scholarship, sees an opportunity.

The emirate is mounting the world's first systematic drive to profit from "halal" goods and services by setting global standards for them and providing certification where the standards are met.

In January Dubai's ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, announced plans to make the emirate a centre of the "Islamic economy". Next week, Dubai will host a conference on the subject that it is expected to attract over 2,000 officials, businessmen and consumers from around the world.

It might sound like a hard sell for a city where alcohol and bikinis loom large in the lives of some of its foreign residents and millions of tourists who visit each year, but the emirate, already the Gulf's top financial centre and a merchandise trade hub, may have the business acumen and international connections to pull it off.

In fact, it may succeed precisely because of its cosmopolitan culture. Standards set in stricter countries such as Saudi Arabia might struggle for acceptance in more liberal societies such as Malaysia; Dubai may be best placed to take a middle path acceptable to most of the world's 1.6 billion Muslims.

"Dubai's economy hinges on its maintenance of coexistence among faiths," said Jim Krane, a fellow at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy in the United States, and author of "City of Gold: Dubai and the Dream of Capitalism".

"That makes Dubai an ideal testing ground for halal standards. If halal standards are too restrictive and impinge on social freedoms, they might hurt business."

HALAL

A decade ago the term "halal", an Arabic word meaning "permissible", was applied mostly to the food eaten by Muslims. Increasingly it is also being used to describe a range of products and services, including high fashion, toiletries, medicine, hotels and tourism, entertainment and education.

Halal toothpaste and medical products do not include alcohol or animal derivatives from banned sources, such as pigs, or cattle slaughtered in an improper way. Halal fashion means clothes that are both modest and trendy.