Day 3 of Adipec 2025 concluded on November 5 with a resounding call to action for global financiers, policymakers, and energy leaders to accelerate investment in energy and infrastructure. Against the backdrop of high-level dialogue, the event spotlighted the urgent need for scalable capital deployment to meet rising energy demand.
With over $3.3 trillion in global energy investment
projected this year, Adipec reinforced its role as a catalyst for unlocking
strategic partnerships and financial innovation across the energy value chain.
Taking place from 3-6 November, Adipec 2025 is convening
financiers, policymakers and industry leaders to unlock the capital, tools and
frameworks needed to transform global energy systems at speed and scale.
With energy security and affordability shaping investment
decisions, and challenges persisting in emerging economies such as high
borrowing costs, investment risks, limited creditworthy off-takers, and
regulatory uncertainty, Adipec 2025âs Finance & Investment programme has
been showcasing how redirected capital flows, evolving portfolios, and
inclusive frameworks are strengthening resilience, competitiveness, and
long-term decarbonisation.
FINANCING BASED ON SOUND FUNDAMENTALS, NOT SHORT-TERM MARKET
SHIFTS
In the session titled âCommanding the next decade: how
leaders are positioning for global volatility and opportunityâ, experts
discussed long-term financial planning in a dynamic energy landscape,
recommending fundamental-based decisions over reactive policy.
In the session, Maarten Wetselaar, CEO, Moeve, said: "You
always have to invest based on fundamentals rather than on the latest policy
change, whether itâs in Europe or the US or wherever in the world, because it
takes so long to build energy investments that itâd be a bit risky to respond
to the latest coming out of wherever in the world.â
ADVANCING GLOBAL GOALS WITH DECARBONISATION INVESTMENT
While the global energy industry looks to bring more energy
streams online, sector experts advised a continued focus on decarbonising our
existing energy system, to ensure long-term energy sustainability. A key part
of that is reducing carbon and methane emissions, for which greater investment
in technology innovation is required.
During a session titled âMethane emissions reduction: a
decarbonisation priorityâ, Zubin Bamji, Manager Energy and Extractives Global
Department, The World Bank Group, spoke about the critical role of financing in
addressing methane emissions reduction. âFinance is one of the key missing
elements in this ecosystem of methane and flaring decarbonisation, and the
World Bank would like to play a role in that gap. The idea was to provide
catalytic funding that is needed in many developing countries or emerging economies
for them to recognise that there is actually an opportunity here.â
His view was supported by Khalid Bin Hadi, Managing
Director, UAE, Siemens Energy, who linked the ability to advance
decarbonisation to investment in innovation, saying: âFor me, innovation is
about solving problems. We need to apply innovation, we need to scale
innovations, and that will require three elements: investments, industry
partnerships, and true partnership.â
MYRIAD OPPORTUNITIES FOR ENERGY AND INFRASTRUCTURE
INVESTMENT IN EMERGING MARKETS
Several rapidly developing emerging market economies are
looking to connect capital to resource extraction projects, which is often dependent
on cross-sector and cross-border collaboration.
In the session titled âStrengthening Nigeria and NNPCâs
position in global energy marketsâ, Bayo Bashir Ojulari, Group CEO of NNPC,
discussed how Nigeriaâs booming energy sector is approaching development. He
said: âWith production comes the requirement for investment, so weâre focusing
on collaboration that starts with the baseline, making our existing
partnerships as effective and sharp as possible, while also discussing new
partners, new investments, and new opportunities.â
The importance of sound, stable, and clear policy in
attracting and unlocking finance and investment was another message reiterated
by speakers at Adipec 2025.
Charlotte Wolff-Bye, Chief Sustainability Officer, PETRONAS, summarised the message succinctly when she said: âBusiness works well when we have a line of sight of clear regulation, clear policy, line of sight, all of this. We like that. Most of us operate in many countries. We enjoy that. Investment will flow. The inability to regulate some of these policy commitments, perhaps lack of enforcement, doesnât help, actually.â -OGN/TradeArabia News Service
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