KUALA LUMPUR – Malaysia hopes to see a paradigm shift on total emissions and on how to incentivise low-carbon practices in fuelling global green growth in the post-Covid-19 world, said Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein.
Speaking at the Asia and Pacific High-level Conference on Belt and Road Cooperation held online yesterday, he said in this regard, it is important for partner countries to reshape the way they finance their recovery from Covid-19.
“A focus on the Covid-19 pandemic does not mean we should let the ball drop on other fronts.
“Now, we must turn a fresh and keen eye to green energy, infrastructure and financing to ensure our economic recovery is sustainable, ahead of the Conference of Parties (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland, this November,” he said in speech text made available to the media.
Hishammuddin said this is where Malaysia is ready and willing to share its expertise in Islamic finance, which it believes will play an increasingly important role in fuelling global green growth, and also infrastructure development.
He pointed out that in 2017, Malaysia was the first country in the world to launch a new climate finance instrument, an Islamic bond called green sukuk, the proceeds of which have been used to fund environmentally sustainable infrastructure projects.
“More recently in April, Malaysia successfully raised US$1.3 billion (RM5.4 billion) through the world’s first sovereign US Dollar Sustainability Sukuk.
“Investor confidence towards this instrument was so overwhelming that it was oversubscribed by 6.4 times,” he said.
Hishammuddin said Kuala Lumpur is home to the Islamic Financial Services Board (ISFB), which is the international standard-setting organisation for this emerging sector.
On the pandemic, he called for an enhanced cooperation from Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) partner countries to ensure that all nations have sufficient vaccines.
“While wealthy nations in the Global North have the privilege of stocking up on vaccines many times their population numbers, countries in the Global South are struggling.
“As we know, we are only safe when all of us are safe.” – Bernama, June 24, 2021