Climate Week Brings Together 400 Young Men, Women to Discuss Environmental Challenges

Four hundred young men and women, representing 72 countries, attended the Middle East and North Africa Climate Week (MENACW) 2023 in Riyadh. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Four hundred young men and women, representing 72 countries, attended the Middle East and North Africa Climate Week (MENACW) 2023 in Riyadh. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Climate Week Brings Together 400 Young Men, Women to Discuss Environmental Challenges

Four hundred young men and women, representing 72 countries, attended the Middle East and North Africa Climate Week (MENACW) 2023 in Riyadh. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Four hundred young men and women, representing 72 countries, attended the Middle East and North Africa Climate Week (MENACW) 2023 in Riyadh. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Four hundred young men and women, representing 72 countries, discussed issues related to achieving climate change goals and carbon neutrality, and promoting sustainable travel and tourism, during the Middle East and North Africa Climate Week (MENACW) 2023 in Riyadh.

Their participation was sponsored by the Sustainable Tourism Global Center (STGC), as the first members of the Youth Champions initiative, which was launched by the center with the aim of forming a community of 100,000 people from 100 countries by 2030.

Participants attended sessions on sustainability and the means to confront climate change challenges, as well as the opportunities available in the tourism sector.

Tourism sustainability

In light of the STGC’s partnership with universities and international institutions around the world, young people will have unprecedented access to cutting-edge research and case studies, support for advocacy campaigns, and training programs pertaining to sustainable tourism.

In this context, Saudi Minister of Tourism Ahmed Al-Khatib said: “By providing young leaders with the necessary resources to support the tourism sector’s transition to climate neutrality, we are enabling them to play an effective role in building a more sustainable tourism and travel sector.”

“The Global Center for Sustainable Tourism, which is based in Saudi Arabia, is not only an investment in the country’s future, but rather an investment in the future of the entire planet,” he added.

Confronting the climate crisis

Gloria Guevara, President of the STGC, said that the travel and tourism sector “must undergo a comprehensive transformation in order to confront the climate crisis.”

She added that the Center firmly believes that the young generation plays an extremely important role in leading this shift.

“Their visions are essential to presenting new ideas, diverse opinions, and ambitious goals,” Guevara stated.

“The center aims to truly engage these future leaders to help build more sustainable and inclusive prospects for tourism and travel. Through this initiative, participants will gain the knowledge, tools and support necessary to use research in advocacy and awareness-building efforts,” she underlined.

Guevara stressed that the Global Center aspires to welcome around 100 concerned universities and international institutions from all over the world by 2030, pointing to ongoing cooperation with high-level academic institutions in the United States, China, France, Spain and the Netherlands to push the STGC’s vision forward.



China Exempts Some Goods from US Tariffs to Limit trade War Pain

TOPSHOT - An aerial view shows cargo containers stacked at a port in Shanghai on April 20, 2025. (Photo by AFP) / China OUT
TOPSHOT - An aerial view shows cargo containers stacked at a port in Shanghai on April 20, 2025. (Photo by AFP) / China OUT
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China Exempts Some Goods from US Tariffs to Limit trade War Pain

TOPSHOT - An aerial view shows cargo containers stacked at a port in Shanghai on April 20, 2025. (Photo by AFP) / China OUT
TOPSHOT - An aerial view shows cargo containers stacked at a port in Shanghai on April 20, 2025. (Photo by AFP) / China OUT

China has exempted some US imports from its 125% tariffs and is asking firms to identify critical goods they need levy-free, according to businesses notified, in the clearest sign yet of Beijing's concerns about the trade war's economic fallout.

The dispensation, which follows de-escalatory statements from Washington, signals that the world's two largest economies were prepared to rein in their conflict, which had frozen much of the trade between them, raising fears of a global recession.

Beijing's exemptions - which business groups hope would extend to dozens of industries - pushed the US dollar up slightly and lifted equity markets in Hong Kong and Japan.

“As a quid-pro-quo move, it could provide a potential way to de-escalate tensions," said Alfredo Montufar-Helu, a senior adviser to the Conference Board's China Center, a think tank.

But, he cautioned: "It’s clear that neither the US nor China want to be the first in reaching out for a deal."

China has not yet communicated publicly on any exemptions. A Friday statement by the Politburo, the Communist Party's elite decision-making body, focused on efforts to maintain stability at home by supporting firms and workers most affected by tariffs.

The readout, which followed the Politburo's regular monthly meeting, showed that Beijing was also ready to hunker down and fight a trade war of attrition if needed to outlast Washington in enduring the pain from the breakdown of their relationship.

A Ministry of Commerce taskforce is collecting lists of items that could be exempted from tariffs and is asking companies to submit their own requests, according to a person with knowledge of that outreach.

The ministry said on Thursday it had held a meeting with more than 80 foreign companies and business chambers in China to discuss the impact of US tariffs on investment and the operation of foreign firms in the country.

"The Chinese government, for example, has been asking our companies what sort of things are you importing to China from the US that you cannot find anywhere else and so would shut down your supply chain," American Chamber of Commerce in China President Michael Hart said.

Hart added some member pharmaceutical companies had reported being able to import drugs to China without tariffs. He believed the exemptions were drug-specific, not industry-wide.

The chief executive of French aircraft engine maker Safran said on Friday it had been informed last night that China had granted tariff exemptions on "a certain number of aerospace equipment parts" including engines and landing gear.

The tariff exemptions under consideration by Beijing could provide cost relief for companies in China and take pressure off US exports at a time when the Trump administration has shown signs of wanting to make a deal with Beijing.

The European Union Chamber of Commerce in China also said it had raised the issue of tariff exemptions with the commerce ministry and was awaiting a response.

"Many of our member companies are significantly impacted by the tariffs on critical components imported from the US," President Jens Eskelund said.

A list of 131 categories of products said to be under consideration for tariff exemptions was circulating on Chinese social media platforms and among some businesses and trade groups on Friday. Reuters could not verify the list, which included items ranging from vaccines and chemicals to jet engines.

Huatai Securities said the list corresponded to $45 billion worth of imports to China last year.

China's customs agency and Ministry of Commerce did not reply to requests for comment. China's foreign ministry said it was not familiar with tariff exemption plans, redirecting queries to "relevant authorities".