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Energy security is not a luxury but key to inclusive growth, says Saudi minister

Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan speaks at the opening ceremony of the OPEC Fund for International Development Forum 2025 in Vienna on Tuesday.
Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan speaks at the opening ceremony of the OPEC Fund for International Development Forum 2025 in Vienna on Tuesday.
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Updated 17 June 2025

Energy security is not a luxury but key to inclusive growth, says Saudi minister

Energy security is not a luxury but key to inclusive growth, says Saudi minister
  • Al-Jadaan warned the absence of reliable energy access undermines critical sectors
  • He underscored the far-reaching consequences of energy poverty

RIYADH: Energy security is not a luxury but “a fundamental pillarfor achieving development and inclusive growth,” said Ƶ’s Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan.

Delivering the opening remarks at the OPEC Fund for International Development Forum 2025 in Vienna, Al-Jadaan warned that the absence of reliable energy access undermines critical sectors, including healthcare, education, productivity, and food and water systems.

“With rising geopolitical tensions, market volatility, and surging global energy demand, it has never been more urgent to achieve a more secure and diversified energy landscape,” Al-Jadaan said.

He added: “This requires a strategic push to diversify energy sources, scale up investment in clean technologies, and adopt innovative financing solutions to accelerate energy access and strengthen long-term energy security.”

Four-point reform plan

Al-Jadaan outlined four policy recommendations for multilateral development banks aimed at boosting global energy resilience. He stressed the need to support all energy sources without bias and cautioned against emissions policies that exclude major energy contributors.

He said such policies risk destabilizing markets and disproportionately impact developing economies and vulnerable populations.

His second recommendation focused on expanding concessional financing to underserved regions. The minister praised the World Bank’s “Mission 300” initiative, which aims to provide energy access to 300 million people in Africa, and acknowledged the contributions of the Islamic Development Bank and the OPEC Fund.

Al-Jadaan also commended Ƶ’s Forward7 Clean Fuel Solutions for Food initiative under the Middle East Green Initiative, which promotes clean fuel deployment globally. The program has partnered with institutions including the OPEC Fund, the World Bank, the Islamic Development Bank, and the International Islamic Trade Finance Corp.

De-risking and innovation

Al-Jadaan’s third point emphasized the need to de-risk investments in the energy sector to encourage private sector involvement.

He cited mechanisms such as partial risk guarantees, political risk insurance, and blended finance structures as essential tools to mitigate risks and enhance the feasibility of energy projects, particularly in low-income and high-risk countries.

“These tools help mitigate expected risks and enhance the bankability of energy projects, especially in low-income and high-risk countries,” the minister said.

In his final point, Al-Jadaan called for stronger investment in technologies such as carbon capture and sustainable hydrocarbon applications to reduce emissions and maintain supply during the transition to net-zero.

He underscored the far-reaching consequences of energy poverty, including economic instability, forced migration, and increased humanitarian pressures.

Al-Jadaan reaffirmed the Kingdom’s aim to generate 50 percent of electricity from renewables by 2030 and achieve net-zero emissions by 2060. These goals are being pursued under the Circular Carbon Economy framework.

“In the Kingdom of Ƶ, we are working with everyone to enhance energy security and eliminate energy poverty, while continuing efforts to combat climate change,” he said.

Development crisis warning

OPEC Fund President Abdulhamid Al-Khalifa also addressed the forum, warning of a worsening global development gap.

He said the world is facing what the UN secretary-general has described as a “development emergency,” pointing out that only 18 percent of Sustainable Development Goals have made measurable progress since their inception in 2015.

“Developing countries face a $4 trillion annual funding gap, worsened by rising debt servicing costs that are draining resources from essential services,” Al-Khalifa said.

To address this, he said the OPEC Fund is ramping up efforts and leveraging momentum from previous forums. Among its recent actions, the fund has joined the “Mission 300” initiative to expand energy access.

It has also deployed $1 billion as part of its food security action plan, committed an additional $2 billion to support food supply chains in partner countries, and allocated $1 billion to combat desertification under the Arab Coordination Group's $10 billion Riyadh Global Drought Resilience Partnership.

New trade facility

Al-Khalifa also announced the launch of the OPEC Fund Trade Facility Initiative, a program designed to mobilize billions of dollars in support through 2030.

The facility aims to help countries secure strategic imports, address trade-related liquidity gaps, and strengthen resilience against external economic shocks.

“This is a direct response to an urgent need, and a reflection of our commitments to stand by our partners when it matters most,” he said.

Al-Khalifa emphasized the growing strain on trade as a development cornerstone, citing disrupted supply chains, rising costs, and foreign exchange volatility that are affecting the most vulnerable communities.

Project milestones

In 2024, the OPEC Fund committed $2.3 billion to 70 projects across the globe — a 35 percent increase compared to the previous year.

These projects connected 300,000 households to electricity, built over 500 km of roads, and supported 75,000 farmers and 35,000 women.

As the Arab Coordination Group marks its 50th anniversary this year, Al-Khalifa noted the significance of this milestone, saying the OPEC Fund is honored to stand alongside other member institutions in celebrating five decades of collaborative development efforts.

“We know from experience, when partners align their resources, expertise, and approaches, the results are transformative,” he said.

Both Al-Jadaan and Al-Khalifa stressed that global cooperation and innovation are critical to overcoming current challenges and advancing toward a future of inclusive and sustainable development.


MENA region with strongest global growth outlook over next year, says report

MENA region with strongest global growth outlook over next year, says report
Updated 23 September 2025

MENA region with strongest global growth outlook over next year, says report

MENA region with strongest global growth outlook over next year, says report
  • 72 percent of surveyed chief economists predict weaker growth globally

DUBAI: Global economic growth is expected to weaken over the next year, according to the World Economic Forum’s latest “Chief Economists’ Outlook” report.

Some 72 percent of surveyed chief economists predict weaker growth over the next year globally, citing shifts in trade, rising political uncertainty and rapid technological changes.

Advanced economies are expected to remain stagnant. In the US, more than half (52 percent) anticipate weak or very weak growth.

Still, 22 percent of chief economists expected moderate growth in April, but that number has now increased to 49 percent.

Europe’s outlook is improving, though cautiously. Some 60 percent of respondents expect moderate or strong growth over the coming year, up from 47 percent in April, while 40 percent expect weak growth.

However, emerging markets such as the Middle East and North Africa, South Asia and East Asia and the Pacific show a more optimistic outlook with one in three chief economists expecting strong or very strong growth in these regions.

MENA is leading the charge with the strongest growth outlook. Some 37 percent of chief economists predict strong or very strong growth, up from 22 percent in April.

The World Bank projects the regional economy to grow 2.7 percent in 2025, accelerating to 3.7 percent in 2026 and 4.1 percent in 2027.

Confidence in MENA’s growth is fueled by the region’s efforts to diversify its economies and its tech ambitions, reflected in artificial intelligence-focused partnerships with the US.

The report highlights Ƶ’s Vision 2030 as a “flagship effort” for economic diversification, and Dubai’s drive to become a financial hub, demonstrating the UAE’s ability to foster a business-friendly environment.

Inflation expectations vary across regions. Chief economists (59 percent) anticipate high inflation in the US over the next year. In Europe, only 9 percent expect high inflation, with a substantial 88 percent expecting moderate or low inflation.

In MENA, 60 percent of respondents expect moderate inflation and 28 percent expect low inflation over the next year.

The report also warns that advanced and developing economies are on increasingly divergent growth paths, with 56 percent of chief economists expecting the gap to widen further over the next three years.


Sunlight holds key for Gulf data center cooling says tech giant CEO

Sunlight holds key for Gulf data center cooling says tech giant CEO
Updated 23 September 2025

Sunlight holds key for Gulf data center cooling says tech giant CEO

Sunlight holds key for Gulf data center cooling says tech giant CEO

NASHVILLE: The CEO of a leading tech company has played down concerns over the environmental impact of data centers and said that in areas such as the Gulf there were green options for cooling.

Data centers generate a vast amount of heat and as such need to be continuously cooled.

It is already well documented that data centers are considered to negatively affect the environment through an enormous consumption of electricity in the cooling process, which in turn leads to greenhouse gas emissions and climate change.

The cooling process consumes a significant amount of water, which critics believe can strain local resources — especially in countries such as the UAE and Ƶ where there are plans to create world leading data facilities. 

Likewise, the rise of artificial intelligence is further increasing these demands for energy, water, and infrastructure. 

But speaking on the sidelines of the Autodesk AU 2025: The Design & Make Conference the tech company’s president and CEO, Andrew Anagnost, told Arab News that he believed the benefits far outweighed any long-term impact.

And while acknowledging there was an impact, Anagnost added: “But it’s trivial relative to all the other usage out there in the world. And at the same time we’re able to optimize the usage of these tools to have less need for the computing process.”

The AU 2025: The Design & Make Conference was held in Nashville. Autodesk

According to a report published by the UN Environment Programme, on June 12, internet users worldwide have more than doubled while global internet traffic has expanded to 5.54 billion people worldwide.

The report also noted that the International Energy Agency estimated the data centers would “drive more than 20 percent of the growth in electricity demand between and 2030.”

The report went on to explain that many data centers also use significant volumes of water.

“According to the World Economic Forum, a one-megawatt data center can consume up to 25.5 million liters of water each year only for cooling, comparable to the daily water use of around 300,000 people,” the report added.

Ƶ is already working on the creation of Humain, the Kingdom’s new AI company, with the construction of its first data centers in the Kingdom, which are expected to come online in early 2026.

The centers will be in Riyadh and Dammam, in the Eastern Province, and are expected to launch in the second quarter, each with an initial capacity of up to 100 megawatts.

Depending where you look, data centers can use anything from one megawatt to several hundreds — and in the same type of search up to 300 Saudi homes will use a single megawatt.

But Anagnost said the power used by these centers did not have to be taken from a country’s national grid and as such could be generated on a hyperlocal basis by methods such as nuclear or solar.

“I’m much more worried about other things such as carbon emissions, that are associated with other types of mechanisms and I am not worried about data centers and AI, because everybody’s already building these things to be self-sustaining and use power sources that are actually pretty green in terms of carbon emissions.”

He said that while water consumption was initially comparatively large, once circulated, the center’s water would be contained within and reused once treated and cooled.

The ease of cooling the water used to maintain a suitable temperature in data centers is dependent on differing factors such as the external temperature — in a cold a country the process can be eased by something as straightforward as leaving the door open to allow a flow of cooler air.

Anagnost said the planning in the design of data centers needed to be flexible.

Various factors create “absolutely different ways of passive and active cooling for centers … in the desert you have a lot more sun.”

And that sunlight he said, could be used to generate solar energy, which in turn could be used to power cooling systems.

Whatever the methods used for cooling, the collection of data in centers is going to continue as more processes become digitized.

The engineering and industry sectors waste 95 percent of all data collected.

The introduction of AI is gradually leading to more efficient production methods which can make these sectors and many others more cost effective and less wasteful, with the materials used and the data collected.


OECD upgrades Ƶ’s economic growth forecast to 3.9% in 2026

OECD upgrades Ƶ’s economic growth forecast to 3.9% in 2026
Updated 23 September 2025

OECD upgrades Ƶ’s economic growth forecast to 3.9% in 2026

OECD upgrades Ƶ’s economic growth forecast to 3.9% in 2026

RIYADH: Ƶ’s economic growth forecast for 2026 has been increased to 3.9 percent by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development — up from the 2.5 percent projected in June. 

In its latest “Economic Outlook,” the OECD said that the Kingdom’s gross domestic product will expand by 3.7 percent this year, higher than several of its G20 peers, including the US, the UK, Germany and France. 

The projection made by the organization aligns with a forecast made by the International Monetary Fund in July, which said that the Kingdom’s economy will grow by 3.6 percent this year, before accelerating to 3.9 percent in 2026. 

In its latest report, the OECD said that global economic growth is expected to decline from 3.3 percent in 2024 to 3.2 percent in 2025 and 2.9 percent in 2026. 

“Global economic growth proved more resilient than anticipated in the first half of 2025, with the world economy expanding at an annualised pace of 3.2 percent,” said OECD. 

It added: “The front-loading of goods production and trade ahead of the introduction of higher US tariff rates was an important source of support, with industrial production growth in the first half of the year exceeding the average pace of 2024 in most G20 economies.” 

Collectively, G20 nations are expected to witness an economic growth of 3.2 percent in 2025 and 2.9 percent in 2026, with India bucking the trend amid economic volatility with a GDP expansion of 6.7 percent this year, before marginally decelerating to 6.2 percent in 2026. 

The OECD added that China’s economy will grow by 4.9 percent and 4.4 percent in 2025 and 2026, respectively, while the US is expected to witness an economic growth of 1.8 percent in 2025 and 1.5 percent in 2026.

The economy of the UK is projected to expand by 1.4 percent in 2025 and 1 percent in 2026. 

The French economy is forecast to expand by 0.6 percent in 2025 before slightly accelerating to 0.9 percent in 2026, and the OECD projects Germany’s economy to advance by 0.3 percent in 2025 and 1.1 percent next year. 

The report further said that Ƶ is expected to maintain a healthy inflation rate of 2.2 percent in 2025 and 2 percent in 2026. 

“Inflation in most G20 economies is projected to fall as economic growth and labor markets continue to soften. Headline inflation is expected to decline from 3.4 percent in 2025 to 2.9 percent in 2026, while core inflation in advanced G20 economies remains broadly stable, easing only slightly from 2.6 percent to 2.5 percent,” said OECD. 

In June, the IMF also said that inflation in Ƶ is expected to remain contained, with the headline rate expected to remain 2.1 percent in 2025 and 2 percent in 2026. 


Ƶ deepens economic ties with China and Japan through ministerial visits

Ƶ deepens economic ties with China and Japan through ministerial visits
Updated 23 September 2025

Ƶ deepens economic ties with China and Japan through ministerial visits

Ƶ deepens economic ties with China and Japan through ministerial visits

RIYADH: Ƶ advanced its industrial and investment partnerships with China and Japan through two separate high-level ministerial visits aimed at expanding strategic cooperation, technology transfer, and private-sector investment. 

In Beijing, Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Bandar Alkhorayef met with leaders of ZGC Group, a government-backed innovation platform, to explore collaborations including advanced manufacturing, renewable energy, smart mobility, and aerospace technologies.  

These discussions included plans for ZGC to establish operations in Riyadh in partnership with the National Industrial Development and Logistics Program. 

These initiatives build on the growing depth of Saudi–China economic ties. China is Ƶ’s largest trading partner, accounting for 14 percent of the Kingdom’s exports and 28.9 percent of its imports in May, according to official statistics.   

Alkhorayef’s official visit to China, which runs from Sept, 22 to 26, includes a series of high-level meetings with senior Chinese government officials such as the minister of natural resources, the minister of industry and information technology, the chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission, and the chairman of the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission.   

He is also scheduled to meet with executives from leading industrial and mining companies including BOE, Kyland, and TBEA, as well as Ganfeng Lithium, China Minmetals Corporation, and Gotion Hi-tech, with discussions focused on technology transfer, advanced manufacturing, and investment opportunities in Ƶ.  

As part of the program, the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources will sign a work plan with the China Mining Association to strengthen cooperation in the mining sector.  

The initiative is expected to cover knowledge exchange, identification of mineral opportunities, and new efforts to support the growth of Ƶ’s mining industry, a central component of Vision 2030.  

The Kingdom will also participate as guest of honor at the China International Industrial Fair in Shanghai in November, where it will present its industrial transformation agenda and highlight opportunities for collaboration with Chinese partners.  

ZGC also presented a detailed showcase of its key factories and future plans for establishing a presence in Riyadh.  

In a press statement published on its official X handle, the ministry stated: “The visit aims to broaden economic partnerships between the two countries, attract high-quality investments, and transfer the latest technologies in the industrial and mining sectors.”  

The minister's tour included visits to several ZGC subsidiaries. These included FlightWin, a company specializing in the manufacturing of helicopters and drones; UISEE, which develops autonomous vehicles used in airports and logistics operations; and China Power Energy Storage Energy, known for its innovations in energy storage and integrated renewable power systems.  

 ZGC Group’s potential entry into Riyadh through NIDLP highlights the relevance of its role as Beijing’s innovation platform.  

The group supports companies across the “Idea–IP–Industry–IPO” chain, making it a strategic partner for localizing advanced manufacturing and research and development in Ƶ.   

Subsidiaries such as FlightWin and UISEE align directly with Vision 2030 goals.  

FlightWin’s expertise in helicopters and unmanned aerial vehicles supports the Kingdom’s objective to localize 50 percent of defense procurement and expand aerospace services, while UISEE’s autonomous mobility solutions match efforts to digitize logistics and advance smart-city operations.  

The focus on energy storage technology reflects Ƶ’s broader renewable energy transition.   

The Kingdom aims to generate 50 percent of its electricity from renewables by 2030. This has already created demand for large-scale storage.  

Alkhorayef was joined by Saleh Al-Solami, CEO of the National Industrial Development Center, Jamil Al-Ghamdi, acting CEO of NIDLP, and other senior officials from the Saudi industrial and mining ecosystem.  

Saudi-Japan ties strengthen with investment minister visit

In Japan, Minister of Investment Khalid Al-Falih chaired the 8th Saudi-Japan Vision 2030 Committee alongside Japan’s Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Yoji Muto and State Minister for Foreign Affairs Hisayuki Fujii. The meeting reviewed bilateral progress and concluded with the signing of official minutes to reaffirm commitments under Vision 2030. 

Khalid Al-Falih with Masayuki Hyodo, vice chair of Keidanren. X/@MISA

The high-level visit by Al-Falih highlights Saudi-Japanese collaboration, with trade between the two countries reaching $138.2 billion in 2024, making Japan Ƶ’s third-largest trading partner, while Japanese investment in the Kingdom totaled $23.1 billion, focused on energy, water and waste management, transport and logistics, and manufacturing. 

On its official X handle, the ministry stated: “The Minister of Investment Khalid Al-Falih met leading financiers at the Saudi-Japan Financial Roundtable to explore sectoral opportunities, financial complementarities, and global challenges, while advancing cooperation between peers in the Kingdom and Japan.” 

It added: “Held under the Saudi–Japan Vision 2030 framework, the roundtable congregated 40 senior leaders of Japan’s major industrial firms. The Ministry of Investment–Keidanren Strategic Investment Platform was launched to foster quality investments and private-sector initiatives.” 

Prince Faisal bin Bandar bin Sultan, chairman of the Saudi Esports Federation, and Masayuki Hyodo, vice chair of Keidanren, also took part in the roundtable discussions.


Oman’s Islamic finance sector to top $40bn amid regulatory reforms, sukuk growth: Fitch

Oman’s Islamic finance sector to top $40bn amid regulatory reforms, sukuk growth: Fitch
Updated 23 September 2025

Oman’s Islamic finance sector to top $40bn amid regulatory reforms, sukuk growth: Fitch

Oman’s Islamic finance sector to top $40bn amid regulatory reforms, sukuk growth: Fitch

RIYADH: Oman’s Islamic finance industry is expected to exceed $40 billion between the second half of 2025 and 2026, supported by ongoing regulatory reforms and strong demand for Shariah-compliant financial services, according to Fitch Ratings.   

Despite being the smallest Islamic finance market in the Gulf Cooperation Council, Oman continues to post double-digit growth in Islamic banking and sukuk issuance.  

Fitch estimated the industry’s size at $36 billion as of end-August 2025, with Islamic banking assets comprising nearly two-thirds of the total.   

Islamic finance in the broader region continues to expand at scale. In the UAE the industry surpassed $285 billion in assets by the end of the first quarter of 2025, supported by strong demand and a deepening sukuk market, another Fitch report stated.   

In Ƶ, S&P Global forecasts sustainable sukuk issuance will reach between $10 billion and $12 billion in 2025, reflecting continued sovereign and corporate demand.   

Meanwhile, the Association of South East Asian Nations’s Islamic finance assets neared $950 billion by mid-2025, with projections topping $1 trillion by 2026.  

Regarding Oman, Fitch stated that “growth will be supported by regulatory reforms, Islamic banks’ product and service enhancements, expanding branch and digital banking networks, rising public awareness, and the rise of sukuk as a key funding tool.”  

Islamic banking assets stood at approximately $23.6 billion at the end of July, representing a year-on-year increase of 16.8 percent.   

This growth significantly outpaced the 5.7 percent rise recorded by conventional banks over the same period.   

Islamic banks and windows now account for about 20 percent of the total banking system assets, up from 18.1 percent at the end of the first half of 2024.  

The Islamic windows of six conventional banks held 63 percent of total Islamic banking assets in the first half of 2025, up from 40 percent in the third quarter of 2022, leveraging their parent banks' infrastructure and client base.   

The remaining assets are concentrated in two full-fledged Islamic banks. The Central Bank of Oman has introduced key structural reforms, including a regulatory framework for digital banks launched in June, and a new banking law issued in the first half of the year with dedicated provisions for Islamic banking.  

The sukuk market continues to play a pivotal role in funding, accounting for about 30 percent of total Islamic finance assets.   

It also represented 31 percent of total debt capital market issuance in the first eight months of 2025, excluding treasury bills.   

Despite a slowdown in issuance due to the government’s fiscal consolidation efforts, Oman issued its first Islamic commercial paper earlier this year.  

Fitch Ratings noted $7.25 billion in outstanding Omani sukuk as of mid-2025, all rated ‘BB+’ with a positive outlook and no defaults.  

Liquidity management in the Islamic banking sector has improved following the CBO’s rollout of new instruments that allow it to provide liquidity against Shariah-compliant securities.  

Additionally, the regulator issued a draft framework for Shariah-compliant finance and leasing operations.   

However, the sector continues to face structural limitations, including underdeveloped Islamic hedging products and limited foreign investor participation in riyal-denominated sukuk due to the lack of connections with international securities depositories.  

Beyond banking, the takaful segment reported an 18 percent market share of gross direct premiums as of end-2024, with premiums rising 19.3 percent year on year to $238.4 million.  

Meanwhile, assets under management in Islamic funds remain small, estimated at about $400 million as of August, and are expected to stay limited in the medium term.  

Fitch noted that while Oman’s Islamic finance industry remains the smallest in the Gulf Cooperation Council due to the country’s relatively late adoption and smaller economy, ongoing reforms under the government’s ‘Vision 2040’ strategy present growth opportunities.   

“Business conditions remain favourable for Omani banks – Islamic and conventional – due to still-high, albeit moderating, oil prices,” the report stated, adding that the proposed five percent income tax from 2028 is likely to have only a limited impact on banks, though Islamic banks may be slightly.