Global tensions, including Gaza war, top agenda at annual Davos gathering

People walk inside the venue, on the first day of the annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, January 15, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 16 January 2024
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Global tensions, including Gaza war, top agenda at annual Davos gathering

  • World leaders in politics and business gathered in the Swiss mountain town of Davos on Monday
  • Meeting comes amid wars in Gaza, Sudan and Ukraine, Houthi attacks on shipping in Red Sea

DAVOS: World leaders in politics and business gathered in the Swiss mountain town of Davos on Monday as the five-day annual meeting of the World Economic Forum got underway.

The meeting comes amid soaring geopolitical tension across the world. Wars in Gaza, Sudan and Ukraine continue to escalate, and Houthi attacks on shipping in the Red Sea threaten global trade.

Other major concerns this year are the rise of artificial intelligence, climate change, the job market and the ever-changing digital landscape.

“An unstable global order characterized by polarizing narratives and insecurity, the worsening impacts of extreme weather and economic uncertainty are causing accelerating risks – including misinformation and disinformation – to propagate,” said Saadia Zahidi, managing director of the World Economic Forum.

“World leaders must come together to address short-term crises as well as lay the groundwork for a more resilient, sustainable, inclusive future.”

Top politicians who will speak at this year’s forum include US Secretary of State Antony Blinken; Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian; Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdelrahman Al-Thani; French President Emmanuel Macron; Jordanian Prime Minister Bisher Al-Khasawneh; Ukranian President Volodymyr Zelensky; and Chinese Premier Li Qiang.

Meanwhile global executives are increasingly worried about the long-term viability of their businesses, a pre-Davos survey by the auditor PricewaterhouseCoopers suggests. About 45 percent of more than 4,700 chief executives surveyed did not believe their businesses would survive the next 10 years.

“There's the 55 percent who think they don’t have to change radically, and I would argue that's a little naive because the world is changing so fast around them,” PwC boss Bob Moritz said.


Riyadh sees 24% decrease in infrastructure project duration in 2025

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Riyadh sees 24% decrease in infrastructure project duration in 2025

RIYADH: Riyadh Infrastructure Projects Center recorded a 24 percent decrease in the execution time of infrastructure projects in 2025 compared to 2024, with the average implementation period falling from 34 days to 26 days.

The improvement reflects effective coordination among various partners and stakeholders, alongside steady growth in project volumes.

This reduction came despite a rise in the total number of permits from more than 150,000 in 2024 to over 195,000 in 2025, marking a 29 percent increase in energy, water, telecommunications, and road projects in the region.

RIPC explained that the improvement is directly linked to the implementation of a comprehensive infrastructure plan and enhanced pre-planning, aligned with its strategic approach to managing projects through an integrated value chain covering planning, coordination, and enablement.

This approach, RIPC noted, relies on continuous regulatory and standard updates to boost procedural efficiency, minimize time and spatial conflicts, and reduce duplication of work.

The center highlighted that this approach reflects its regulatory role in unifying operational vision, improving stakeholder coordination, activating tools that enhance execution quality, and ensuring alignment with quality-of-life objectives and asset protection.

Operational indicators also reflected growth in project lengths, increasing from 9,490 km to 11,784 km — a 24 percent rise — alongside a surge in handled reports, which rose from 101,102 to 233,101, marking a 131 percent increase, highlighting an expanded monitoring scope and improved efficiency in managing infrastructure-related reports.

Supervisory visits rose from 84,316 in 2024 to 292,794 in 2025, a 247 percent increase, alongside an improvement in license compliance rates from 91 percent to 92 percent. These results reinforce the center’s commitment to strengthening adherence to safety and quality standards through effective oversight and standardized compliance guidance.

RIPC also highlighted that these achievements reflect its strategic focus on minimizing obstacles from infrastructure projects and reducing their urban impact during implementation, adding that this approach contributes to improving the city’s urban landscape, limiting closures and disruptions, and enhancing the daily experience of Riyadh residents.

It affirmed its continued efforts to advance planning, coordination, digitalization, and data management, while updating the regulatory and standards framework as part of a long-term strategic roadmap.

The center emphasized that this strategy is designed to keep pace with project expansion, boost organizational efficiency and sustainability, and support the development of a more integrated and harmonious urban environment for the city and its residents.