
Global investment decline may worsen due to tariffs, warns UN trade agency
GENEVA : Global foreign direct investment (FDI) fell for the second consecutive year in 2024, with fears this year could be even worse as trade tensions rock investor confidence, the UN agency for trade and development said in a report published today.
FDI transactions, which do not include several European conduit economies, declined by 11%, indicating a significant reduction in actual productive investment activity, according to the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).
Geopolitical tensions and trade fragmentation contributed to lower investment last year as they created uncertainty, which UNCTAD secretary-general Rebeca Grynspan described as a 'poison' for investor confidence.
'We are even more worried about the picture in 2025…we already feel that investment is halted…tariffs are affecting growth,' Grynspan told Reuters, with short-term risk management being prioritised over long-term investment.
UNCTAD said its outlook for international investment in 2025 was negative due to trade tensions.
Early data for the first quarter of 2025 shows record low deal and project activity.
When several European conduit economies – which act as intermediary hubs where investments temporarily pass through before reaching their final destinations – are included, the data showed that FDI increased by 4% to US$1.5 trillion.
However, UNCTAD noted that this figure masks the reality that much of this investment is merely passing through these jurisdictions and was not productive.
'We see a very worrying tendency…Investment that has a real impact on jobs and infrastructure is going down,' she said.
Developed economies suffered a sharp drop in investment, with a 58% decrease in Europe.
North America, however, observed a 23% increase in FDI, led by the US, while countries in Southeast Asia reached the second-highest level of FDI on record with a 10% rise, representing US$225 billion.
Though capital inflows in developing countries were broadly stable, UNCTAD observed that capital was not being injected into crucial job-creating sectors such as infrastructure, energy and technology.
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Malay Mail
8 hours ago
- Malay Mail
Clean energy finance must keep pace with data centre boom — Nazrul Hazizi Noordin
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But behind this progress lies a looming challenge: a soaring energy demand. These data centres could soon account for as much as 30 per cent of the country's electricity use. While projections vary, experts warn that by 2035 their peak demand could swell to over 5,000 megawatts (MW). To put this into perspective, that is roughly equivalent to Singapore's total electricity consumption in 2023, or the output of five large coal plants, or enough to power 3.5 to 4 million average Malaysian homes for a year. That is a massive load for just one sector, placing immense strain on the national grid. While political actors often point to job creation and economic spillovers, the environmental costs payable by future generations yet to come are sobering. With 81 per cent of Malaysia's electricity in 2024 still generated from fossil fuels, meeting this new demand risks deepening dependence on carbon-intensive sources. At 5,000 MW, the sector could emit around 26 million tonnes of CO₂ annually, tantamount to adding 5.7 million petrol cars to the roads (more than a quarter of existing registered cars). Offsetting that footprint would require the carbon sequestration capacity of approximately 31 million hectares of forest in a year (almost the size of Malaysia's entire land area) or planting about 430 million tree seedlings and growing them for a decade. This is not a call for slowing digital development. Rather, the pace of investment in energy efficiency and clean energy must at least match, or ideally exceed, the sector's growth. Yet progress on both fronts remains far from adequate. By 2030, data centre utilisation density is projected to improve, from serving over 60,000 people per MW today to about 14,000 per MW. But this 80 per cent leap will still be easily outstripped by overall consumption growth. On the renewable side, the gap is even starker. 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But without aligning its digital growth with clean energy finance, the country risks locking itself into a high-carbon future just as the world moves the other way. Investors and lenders must channel capital towards energy efficiency and renewables with the same urgency that is powering data centre expansion. Seizing this moment will speak volumes about their commitment to reaching net zero. * Dr Nazrul Hazizi Noordin is an assistant professor at the Institute of Islamic Banking and Finance, International Islamic University Malaysia. ** This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail.

Barnama
9 hours ago
- Barnama
ASEAN Poised To Lead Global South In Low-carbon, Sustainable Growth -- Tengku Zafrul
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Free Malaysia Today
a day ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Genting Malaysia's loss-making US unit sells assets for RM2.2bil
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