
APEC Finance Ministers to launch new 5-year roadmap in October
Deputy Finance Minister Lim Hui Ying shared that the roadmap would establish the priorities of the APEC Finance Ministers' Process for the next five years.
"It will identify initiatives and medium-term outcomes to be achieved to realise the Putrajaya Vision 2040 of an open, dynamic, resilient, and peaceful Asia-Pacific community.
"This roadmap will also include initiatives and outcomes aimed at supporting sustainable growth across the region.
"It is crucial for Asean member countries to collaborate closely within the APEC framework to ensure Southeast Asia's shared priorities are incorporated into the new APEC roadmap and to ensure all initiatives are complementary and consistent," she said during her keynote address at the ABAC-Asean BAC-APFF Southeast Asia Conference 2025.
She reaffirmed Malaysia's commitment to playing an active role, particularly through collaboration with the Asean Business Advisory Council (Asean-BAC), to promote regional financial integration and development.
She further noted that Malaysia anticipates valuable insights and recommendations from the "Financing Southeast Asia's Development Priorities" conference held as part of the event.
"This is alongside aspirations to facilitate the annual roundtable dialogue between APEC Finance Ministers and the APEC Business Advisory Council (ABAC) in Incheon, South Korea, this coming October," she added.
The 2025 ABAC-Asean BAC-APFF Southeast Asia Conference convenes financial and business leaders to address critical challenges facing Asean and APEC and also spotlights pivotal themes such as sustainable energy access and financial digitalisation.
The event served as a platform to showcase regional successes, with speakers highlighting projects that exemplify effective public-private collaboration.
Building on the momentum of the 46th Asean Summit, the conference highlighted the interconnectedness of Asean's and APEC's strategic priorities.
The discussions aligned with Asean-BAC's 12-initiative roadmap, which includes advancing capital market integration and promoting sustainability frameworks.
Asean-BAC chairman Tan Sri Nazir Razak said that the programme aims to unite leaders, investors, and policymakers in a solutions-oriented dialogue on Asean's growth trajectory.
He also called for increased accountability and action from both the public and private sectors to drive economic integration in the region.
Highlighting the stagnant intra-Asean trade and investment, he stated, "When I imply the lack of execution in Asean, I am not just pointing at the regional organisation or governments for that matter. The private sector has also fallen short."
Nazir called fo the need for businesses to pursue partnerships, mergers and acquisitions (M&A), and robust supply chain and trade activities, noting, "Intra-Asean trade and investments remain low as a percentage of total trade and investments."
"The surge in regional Asean companies of the late 2000s has slowed. Are we fulfilling our potential in attracting investors to Asean?"
"That is why this conference, themed 'Financing Southeast Asia's Development Priorities: Identifying Medium-Term Deliverables for Public-Private Collaboration', is so critical," he said.
"Asean needs to deepen and connect its capital markets to unlock the potential of domestic savings, attract global capital, and drive innovation," he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Malay Mail
11 minutes ago
- Malay Mail
20 things we think you should buy at MR D.I.Y.
KUALA LUMPUR, July 23 — Whether you are a talented Mr or Ms Fix-It around the house or just someone who does the odd maintenance chores now and then, MR D.I.Y. — everyone's go-to spot — has everything you need. With shelves packed with tools, cleaning supplies, lifestyle gadgets, and quirky finds, it's the kind of place where you walk in for one item and leave with 10. And to celebrate MR D.I.Y.'s 20th anniversary — yes, it has been 20 years! — we thought we'd highlight 20 products that make life easier and affordable for all of us. Here are the 20 must-haves — from practical picks to hidden gems — we think are worth grabbing the next time you visit a MR D.I.Y. store: 1. Batteries 2. Anti-rust spray 3. Food containers 4. Garbage bags 5. Light bulbs 6. Fluorescent tubes 7. Mineral water 8. Door knobs 9. Spray paint 10. Clothes hangers 11. Super glue 12. Cling wrap 13. Wrapping paper 14. Electrical products like shavers, rice cookers, etc 15. Snacks 16. Local branded products 17. RM2/RM2.20/RM2.40 products 18. Official merchandise 19. Local Brand/Colour Series products 20. MR D.I.Y. recycle bag


Malay Mail
25 minutes ago
- Malay Mail
XTransfer Announces Over 700,000 Global Customers
Emerging Markets Become the "Blue Ocean" for Enterprises Going Global Bill Deng, Founder and CEO of XTransfer, attends the 01VC CEO Summit 2025. SHANGHAI, CHINA - Media OutReach Newswire - 23 July 2025 -, announces that its global enterprise customer base has exceeded. This significant milestone highlights the platform's remarkable achievements in supporting small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to expand globally. As a global leader in the B2B cross-border trade payment sector, XTransfer is committed to providing SMEs with secure, convenient, and compliant one-stop cross-border financial solutions, enabling businesses to capitalise on the immense opportunities in emerging was invited to attend the. During the roundtable discussion focused on new dynamics in cross-border trade,, "Today, for everyin Chinese exports,are settled through XTransfer, and one-tenth of SME foreign trade enterprises have registered on our platform. With access to firsthand data insights, we are uniquely positioned to capture shifts in global trade flows."In recent years, tariff wars and trade frictions have forced Chinese export enterprises to review their global market strategies."Digitalisation is accelerating the redistribution of global trade. While the share of the U.S. market declines, emerging markets in Southeast Asia and Africa are rapidly absorbing this growth. Markets in Africa, Southeast Asia, and Latin America are becoming the "blue ocean" for Chinese enterprises expanding globally."of all clients on the XTransfer platform in the first half of 2025 exported to Asia, Africa, or Latin America. Additionally, the proportion of payments received from Asia, Africa, and Latin America increased bycompared to the same period in the previous hosts the largest nationwide foreign trade conference in China every year,, which is attended by over 3,000 foreign trade business owners and has more than 2 million online participants. "For the past three years, the primary theme of this conference has been how to discover emerging markets beyond the United States. The opportunities in these markets are enormous, and by establishing a presence now, companies will enjoy a first-mover advantage over the next decade,", "After COVID, we observed a rapid improvement in global digitalisation levels. Therefore, I believe the global opportunities for China's industrial chains will become even more substantial. Businesses must go global, particularly by focusing on less developed countries, to capture the new dividends brought by digital integration. This is why we fully support our clients in accelerating their diversification into multiple markets."XTransfer will continue to enhance its digital capabilities and actively promote the establishment of a globally localised service network to assist SMEs in securely, conveniently, and compliantly exploring overseas markets. XTransfer is committed to providing enterprises with one-stop cross-border financial solutions to improve global operational efficiency and risk #XTransfer #Crossborder #Payment #SMEs #EmergingMarkets The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.


Daily Express
41 minutes ago
- Daily Express
Net zero more than renewable energy
Published on: Wednesday, July 23, 2025 Published on: Wed, Jul 23, 2025 By: Sisca Humphrey Text Size: Dr Tan framed the company's climate strategy around two pillars, which are adaptation and mitigation. Kota Kinabalu: Net zero is not just about renewable energy, but it is about a systemic transformation that reshapes supply chains, product design, social commitments and innovation, said Head of Group Transformation at FGV Holdings Berhad Dr Gideon Tan. Speaking at the Marim Conference 2025 in here, recently, Dr Tan said the company's climate action efforts extend far beyond emissions and energy. 'Net zero is not just solar panels or certificates, it's a whole-of-organisation agenda,' he said. To contextualise FGV's sustainability journey, he said the company's complex business divisions, ranging from plantations and downstream processing to logistics, healthcare and even education. He noted that 74 per cent of FGV's palm oil crops come from smallholders, mirroring Asia's broader food system, which heavily depends on them. 'We're not just operating commercial estates. We run clinics and have built 17 schools for the children of migrant workers,' he said. Dr Tan framed the company's climate strategy around two pillars, which are adaptation and mitigation. 'Managing the effects of climate change is adaptation. Tackling the causes is mitigation. We need to do both,' he said. On adaptation, FGV is addressing climate extremes such as flooding and droughts while responding to global policies like the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR). Unable to expand land use due to deforestation restrictions, the group has focused on increasing yields per hectare. 'We no longer have the option to expand land. Yield improvement is the only way forward,' he said, citing their 56-year-old R&D centre that develops higher-yield planting materials. FGV has also deployed technologies like the FGV Geodagger, a satellite-linked device for precision replanting. Turning to mitigation, he emphasised the importance of understanding company emissions through inventory baselining, a process recently validated under the SBTi (Science-Based Targets initiative). The group's mitigation roadmap includes energy efficiency, solar power, bioenergy and transportation reforms. 'Our plantations operate in areas without public utilities. We build our own water, wastewater and energy systems,' he said. On energy efficiency, FGV performs audits across its supply chain and encourages internal innovation. One in-house invention is an electric transporter to replace petrol units for field operations. 'We want our employees to be innovators and our electric transporter was built in-house,' Dr Tan said. FGV's solar strategy leverages Malaysia's NETR framework and includes various ownership and feed-in tariff models. However, it's in bioenergy that the company sees significant potential. FGV operates biogas plants capturing methane emissions from mill effluent ponds, which is a major source of GHG. 'We capture methane before it reaches the atmosphere, one tonne of methane is equivalent to 28 tonnes of CO₂,' he said. It also operates two biomass power plants, including one in Sabah's off-grid areas and is exploring diverse applications for palm biomass, ranging from compost to aviation fuel. 'Palm oil uses only 0.5 per cent of the world's agricultural land, yet produces over a third of global vegetable oil supply,' he said, highlighting the efficiency of palm oil in the global food system. FGV also turns biomass into animal feed using black soldier fly larvae in what he calls a 'bio-refinery without a factory'. 'We turn waste into protein with black soldier fly larvae. It's a bio-refinery without a factory,' he said. As for transportation, FGV is replacing petrol-based field vehicles with EV models and trialling B100 biodiesel in logistics trucks and passenger vehicles. Dr Tan reiterated that net zero should not be reduced to a single target or technology. 'Net zero is not a slogan. It's a systemic shift in how we operate across supply chains, products and people,' he said. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia