Sustainability Forum Middle East spotlights Saudi role in driving climate finance deployment

Speakers at the National Vision Panel during the Sustainability Forum Middle East. AN/Waad Hussain
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Updated 02 February 2026
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Sustainability Forum Middle East spotlights Saudi role in driving climate finance deployment

MANAMA: Saudi Arabia’s growing influence over sustainable finance and climate-aligned investment was a central theme at the Sustainability Forum Middle East, as regional banks, investors, and policymakers signaled a shift from climate pledges to market execution.

The fourth edition of the forum, held in Bahrain under the theme “Advancing Alignment, Innovation, and Implementation for Energy and Climate Transformation,” brought together more than 500 participants and over 50 speakers from government, finance, energy, and industry. 

While the agenda covered climate diplomacy and national strategies, the dominant conversations this year centered on capital deployment, bankability, technology, and the commercial realities of the energy transition.

Saudi Arabia’s role in shaping that transition was repeatedly highlighted, particularly through its efforts to structure green finance instruments, integrate sustainability into Vision 2030 programs, and scale renewable energy ambitions. Global banks at the forum pointed to the kingdom as a key driver of demand for credible sustainable finance frameworks in the Gulf.

“Saudi Arabia has demonstrated clear leadership through Vision 2030 and its green financing frameworks,” Lina Osman, managing director and head of sustainable finance for the Middle East, Africa and Pakistan at Standard Chartered, told Arab News.

“The Public Investment Fund’s green bond issuance is a clear demonstration of the value of the opportunity that is available in Saudi Arabia and how Saudi Arabia is seizing that opportunity,” she added.

Osman also noted that Saudi Arabia’s target of sourcing 50 percent of its electricity from renewables represents a “true demonstration of leadership in sustainability,” adding that financing instruments will need to evolve to serve those ambitions. 

She said the bank has been customizing sustainable finance structures for Gulf Cooperation Council clients as the market becomes more sophisticated and sector-specific.

Organizations at the forum said the region has moved beyond ESG signaling and into discussions about return profiles, risk pricing, and revenue impact. 

“Financial institutions are now focused on how sustainability generates value — reducing costs, building resilience, and boosting revenue. Previously, it was mostly window dressing,” said Ian McCallum, chief sustainability officer at Bank ABC. 

Speaking to Arab News, he added that Saudi Arabia is playing a “significant role in shaping the direction of sustainable finance by continuing to strengthen ESG regulatory and disclosure requirements.”

Speakers from private markets and venture capital also pointed to Saudi Arabia as an emerging market for climate technologies that are moving from pilot phase to commercialization. 

Investors highlighted carbon removal, energy optimization, and AI-enabled climate solutions as areas where the Kingdom’s scaling capacity and demand for industrial decarbonization make deployment feasible.

Beyond finance, the forum examined how the GCC can accelerate industrial decarbonization through AI integration, carbon capture, supply chain reform, and the expansion of renewables. 

Panels explored how sovereign strategies and industrial policy are aligning across the region, with Saudi Arabia’s energy transition goals seen as an anchor for cross-border capital flows.

The event saw memorandums of understanding and multi-sector partnerships intended to translate national ambitions into deployable projects. 

Organizers said the agreements reflect a shift toward implementation, positioning the Gulf as a market where climate action is increasingly tied to competitiveness, industrial growth, and long-term economic resilience.


Oil surges as Iran conflict disrupts Middle Eastern supply flow

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Oil surges as Iran conflict disrupts Middle Eastern supply flow

SINGAPORE: Oil prices surged by as much as 13 percent on Monday after shipping in the crucial Strait of Hormuz was disrupted by retaliatory Iranian attacks following initial bombing by Israel and the US that killed Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Brent crude futures rose to as much as $82.37 a barrel, the highest since January 2025, before retreating to be up $5.41, or 7.4 percent, to $78.28 by 09:05 am Saudi time.

US West Texas Intermediate crude climbed to an intraday high of $75.33, up over 12 percent and the highest since June, though it later pared gains and was up $4.74, or 7.1 percent, at $71.76.

Both benchmarks jumped as a sustained exchange of counterattacks damaged tankers and sharply disrupted shipmentsin the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway between Iran and Oman that connects the Gulf to the Arabian Sea.

On a typical day, ships carrying oil equal to about one-fifth of global demand from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Iraq, Iran, and Kuwait sail through the Strait along with tankers hauling diesel and jet fuel and gasoline and other products from their refineries to major Asian markets including China and India.

“Markets are acknowledging the seriousness of the conflict, but are also signalling that, for now, this is a geopolitical shock, not a systemic crisis,” said Priyanka Sachdeva, senior analyst at Phillip Nova.

Prolonged effective closure of the Strait would push oil prices higher and cause shortages in supply to top importers China and India.

More than 200 vessels including oil and liquefied gas tankers have dropped anchor outside the Strait, shipping data showed on Sunday. Three tankers were damaged and one seafarer was killed in attacks on Sunday in Gulf waters.

Asian economies are assessing oil stockpile availability and ways to secure alternative supply. South Korea will offer petroleum from its stockpiles to local industries if supply disruptions are prolonged, while India is exploring alternative shipping routes.

PRICES PARE GAINS

Still, prices pared gains after the steep surge in early Asian trade, which analysts attributed to buyers already factoring a risk premium into prices in anticipation of the conflict.

Brent had risen over 19 percent this year until Friday’s close, while WTI was trading about 17 percent higher.

Amid the conflict, OPEC+ agreedon Sunday to a modest oil output boost of 206,000 barrels per day for April. Every OPEC+ producer is essentially producing at capacity except for Saudi Arabia, RBC Capital analyst Helima Croft said.

The International Energy Agency is in touch with major producers in the Middle East, director Fatih Birol said on Sunday. The energy watchdog coordinates the release of strategic petroleum reserves from developed countries during emergencies.

Globally, visible oil inventories stood at 7.827 million barrels, enough for 74 days of demand, which is near a historical median, Goldman Sachs wrote in a note.

Citi analysts expect Brent to trade between $80 and $90 a barrel this week amid the ongoing conflict.

“Our baseline view is that the Iranian leadership changes, or that the regime changes sufficiently as to stop the war within 1-2 weeks, or the US decides to de-escalate having seen a change in leadership and set back Iran's missiles and nuclear program over the same time frame,” Citi analysts led by Max Layton wrote.

Analysts are also warning retail gasoline prices in the US, the world’s biggest fuel consumer, may break above $3 a gallon because of the conflict, a potentially risky result for President Donald Trump and his Republican Party ahead of midterm elections this November.

US gasoline futures surged by as much as 9.1 percent to $2.496 a gallon, their highest since July 2024, and were last at $2.381 a gallon, up 4.2 percent.