Davos 2025: Trade, tariffs, AI and UN chief Guterres dominate World
Economic Forum agenda
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[January 23, 2025] By
JAMEY KEATEN
DAVOS, Switzlerand (AP) — U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres
ratcheted up his warning about climate change and said the world’s
thirst for fossil fuels is a “Frankenstein monster” that spares no one,
while calling for greater attention to risks posed by artificial
intelligence if its ascent goes ungoverned — even as some leaders played
up its promise.
The United Nations' chief headlined a flurry of activities and talk
sessions on Wednesday at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in
Davos, where shifts underway in Washington during U.S. President Donald
Trump’s first week back in office also featured heavily in the scheduled
events and side chats of government officials, academics and business
executives.
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy combed the corridors, meeting
with leaders such as Israeli President Isaac Herzog and Vietnamese
President Luong Cuong, as well as German opposition leader and would-be
chancellor Friedrich Merz in an effort to stir up support for Ukraine's
fight against Russia.
Here are some highlights from Wednesday's session:
UN chief issues warning about Big Oil ...
With energy and tech industry executives on hand, Guterres returned to
one of his most frequent appeals: for the world to do more to fight
global warming.
Trump's promises to “ drill, baby, drill ” and an array of worries about
economic growth in some big but moribund economies in Europe and beyond
have rattled public and private commitments to reduce carbon emissions.
Guterres bemoaned how 2024 was the hottest year on record, and warned of
rising sea levels that could overwhelm ports that ship oil in and out.
“And rising temperatures, which are, overwhelmingly, caused by burning
fossil fuels,” he said. “Our fossil fuel addiction is a Frankenstein
monster, sparing nothing and no one. All around us, we see clear signs
that the monster has become master.”
Companies that have recently backtracked on their climate commitments
are “on the wrong side of history,” he added.
... and “ungoverned” AI
The U.N. chief lauded the promise of artificial intelligence, saying it
could revolutionize learning, help improve health care and support
farmers with tools that boost productivity.
“But with this promise comes profound risk, especially if AI is left
ungoverned,” he said. warning that it could be used "as a tool of
deception,” erode trust in institutions, disrupt labor markets and
affect the conduct of war.
Trump on Tuesday announced a joint U.S. venture that plans to invest up
to $500 billion for infrastructure linked to AI though a new partnership
formed by Oracle, SoftBank and OpenAI.
The Stargate project's goal us to build out data centers and the
electricity generation needed by voracious power needs of fast-evolving
AI in Texas, the White House said.
Julie Sweet, chief executive officer of Accenture, the multinational
information technology and consulting firm, hailed the Stargate
investment as an “absolute validation that AI is important for companies
and countries.”
She said the United States appeared set to maintain its approach toward
AI of innovation first, then applying “appropriate guardrails” — unlike
other places that put the guardrails first.
“AI will not be successful if people don’t trust it,” Sweet told The
Associated Press. "So I’m not worried about it (being) too deregulated
because the interests of making sure AI is trusted are aligned across
all groups.”
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Antonio Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations, speaks
during a plenary session in the Congress Hall during the 55th annual
meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF), in Davos, Switzerland,
Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2025. (Laurent Gillieron/Keystone via AP)
Malaysian PM Anwar sees
challenge, promise with AI
Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said his country will have to
“navigate” AI but will push it “on a faster pace, partly because of
my age: we don't have time to wait.”
Anwar was speaking in Davos after the Southeast Asian nation and its
neighbor Singapore struck a deal to create a special economic zone
that would ramp up job creation and lure investment.
“AI is, of course, a new challenge. We don’t have the expertise (or)
knowhow,” he said. “But AI means changing the education system,
health services, blockchain, so it will have to come about.”
From AI to social media: Spain's Sánchez wants EU to act
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez called for the EU to help “make
social media great again” by taking tough regulatory measures
against the technology platforms he described as being run by
tycoons who flaunt the law.
“The tech billionaires want to overthrow democracy. This, ladies and
gentlemen, is the truth of the terrible threat we face,” Sánchez
said, citing the spread of misinformation that has fueled
anti-liberal political movements. “The technology that was intended
to free us has become the tool of our own oppression."
The center-left Socialist said social media were initially
"supposed" to foster unity and democracy, but instead “have brought
division, lies and a reactionary agenda” and now have "begun to
compete unfairly with the strategic sectors of our economies, such
as banking, retail and media outlets.
“And they have ended up in the hands of a reduced group of men — by
the way, only men — whose combined (net) worth triples the entire
European Union’s budget,” he added.
Sánchez said he would ask the EU to enact policies to end what he
called anonymity of social media users, use existing legislation to
“force open the black box of social media algorithms,” as well as
hold the owners of social media platforms “personally accountable”
for any wrongs brought by their sites.
Can Britain avert Trump tariffs? UK's Treasury chief hopes so
Much buzz has been about where Trump’s much-trumpeted tariffs — such
as goods from rival China and even allies Canada and Mexico — will
land.
Britain’s new Treasury chief, Rachel Reeves, noted Trump is mulling
tariffs on countries that are running big trade surpluses with the
United States, which is not the case with the U.K. — ins has a small
trade deficit with the U.S.
“So the problem that President Trump is trying to address is not
addressed through tariffs on the U.K.,” Reeves said.
“There are a million Brits working for American firms and there are
a million Americans working for British firms,” she told reporters.
“Our economies are closely intertwined and I don’t believe that
tariffs between our countries would be in either of our interests.”
___
Associated Press Writer Joseph Wilson in Barcelona, Spain, and Pan
Pylas in London contributed to this report.
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