Sarawak's temporary 50 percent royalty reduction for timber licenses provides urgent relief to a struggling sector while balancing economic preservation with long-term sustainability goals and Premier Sarawak's vision for diversification and forest conservation.
Sarawak targets ninety percent e-waste recovery by 2040 under Premier Abang Johari's bold circular economy vision, transforming waste into wealth and unlocking lucrative investment frontiers in advanced recycling, waste-to-energy infrastructure, and high-value bio-based manufacturing across the region.
Sarawak pepper, the “Black Gold of Borneo,” thrives on premium quality, not volume. Through technologies like AgriSmartEye, blockchain halal traceability, and IoT farming, it targets pharmaceutical and cosmetic markets, ensuring sustainability and global competitiveness.
Sustainable management of marine resources in Sarawak emphasizes the effectiveness of the Blue Economy policy, marine biodiversity conservation, and the Reef Ball project as key strategies. Statistics from the Department of Fisheries show a decline in marine fish landings from 157,249 metric tonnes (2014) to 96,103 metric tonnes (2024), raising concerns about the effectiveness of existing policies.
The Reef Ball project, involving more than 21,800 artificial reef units deployed along 746 km of coastline, has received international recognition and increased fish stocks by 20–30% within 3–5 years after installation. However, enforcement issues, coastal community awareness, and infrastructure shortages remain major challenges.
The journey of Sarawak pepper from vine to global market now tells a story far richer than flavour alone.
It speaks of a government that understands the future of trade, farmers equipped with 21st-century tools, and a product whose value is enhanced by its integrity.
Sarawak's temporary 50 percent royalty reduction for timber licenses provides urgent relief to a struggling sector while balancing economic preservation with long-term sustainability goals and Premier Sarawak's vision for diversification and forest conservation.
Sarawak targets ninety percent e-waste recovery by 2040 under Premier Abang Johari's bold circular economy vision, transforming waste into wealth and unlocking lucrative investment frontiers in advanced recycling, waste-to-energy infrastructure, and high-value bio-based manufacturing across the region.
Sarawak pepper, the “Black Gold of Borneo,” thrives on premium quality, not volume. Through technologies like AgriSmartEye, blockchain halal traceability, and IoT farming, it targets pharmaceutical and cosmetic markets, ensuring sustainability and global competitiveness.
Sustainable management of marine resources in Sarawak emphasizes the effectiveness of the Blue Economy policy, marine biodiversity conservation, and the Reef Ball project as key strategies. Statistics from the Department of Fisheries show a decline in marine fish landings from 157,249 metric tonnes (2014) to 96,103 metric tonnes (2024), raising concerns about the effectiveness of existing policies.
The Reef Ball project, involving more than 21,800 artificial reef units deployed along 746 km of coastline, has received international recognition and increased fish stocks by 20–30% within 3–5 years after installation. However, enforcement issues, coastal community awareness, and infrastructure shortages remain major challenges.
The journey of Sarawak pepper from vine to global market now tells a story far richer than flavour alone.
It speaks of a government that understands the future of trade, farmers equipped with 21st-century tools, and a product whose value is enhanced by its integrity.
Sarawak's temporary 50 percent royalty reduction for timber licenses provides urgent relief to a struggling sector while balancing economic preservation with long-term sustainability goals and Premier Sarawak's vision for diversification and forest conservation.
Sarawak targets ninety percent e-waste recovery by 2040 under Premier Abang Johari's bold circular economy vision, transforming waste into wealth and unlocking lucrative investment frontiers in advanced recycling, waste-to-energy infrastructure, and high-value bio-based manufacturing across the region.
Sarawak pepper, the “Black Gold of Borneo,” thrives on premium quality, not volume. Through technologies like AgriSmartEye, blockchain halal traceability, and IoT farming, it targets pharmaceutical and cosmetic markets, ensuring sustainability and global competitiveness.
Sustainable management of marine resources in Sarawak emphasizes the effectiveness of the Blue Economy policy, marine biodiversity conservation, and the Reef Ball project as key strategies. Statistics from the Department of Fisheries show a decline in marine fish landings from 157,249 metric tonnes (2014) to 96,103 metric tonnes (2024), raising concerns about the effectiveness of existing policies.
The Reef Ball project, involving more than 21,800 artificial reef units deployed along 746 km of coastline, has received international recognition and increased fish stocks by 20–30% within 3–5 years after installation. However, enforcement issues, coastal community awareness, and infrastructure shortages remain major challenges.
The journey of Sarawak pepper from vine to global market now tells a story far richer than flavour alone.
It speaks of a government that understands the future of trade, farmers equipped with 21st-century tools, and a product whose value is enhanced by its integrity.
Sarawak's temporary 50 percent royalty reduction for timber licenses provides urgent relief to a struggling sector while balancing economic preservation with long-term sustainability goals and Premier Sarawak's vision for diversification and forest conservation.
Sarawak targets ninety percent e-waste recovery by 2040 under Premier Abang Johari's bold circular economy vision, transforming waste into wealth and unlocking lucrative investment frontiers in advanced recycling, waste-to-energy infrastructure, and high-value bio-based manufacturing across the region.
Sarawak pepper, the “Black Gold of Borneo,” thrives on premium quality, not volume. Through technologies like AgriSmartEye, blockchain halal traceability, and IoT farming, it targets pharmaceutical and cosmetic markets, ensuring sustainability and global competitiveness.
Sustainable management of marine resources in Sarawak emphasizes the effectiveness of the Blue Economy policy, marine biodiversity conservation, and the Reef Ball project as key strategies. Statistics from the Department of Fisheries show a decline in marine fish landings from 157,249 metric tonnes (2014) to 96,103 metric tonnes (2024), raising concerns about the effectiveness of existing policies.
The Reef Ball project, involving more than 21,800 artificial reef units deployed along 746 km of coastline, has received international recognition and increased fish stocks by 20–30% within 3–5 years after installation. However, enforcement issues, coastal community awareness, and infrastructure shortages remain major challenges.
The journey of Sarawak pepper from vine to global market now tells a story far richer than flavour alone.
It speaks of a government that understands the future of trade, farmers equipped with 21st-century tools, and a product whose value is enhanced by its integrity.
Sarawak's temporary 50 percent royalty reduction for timber licenses provides urgent relief to a struggling sector while balancing economic preservation with long-term sustainability goals and Premier Sarawak's vision for diversification and forest conservation.
Sarawak targets ninety percent e-waste recovery by 2040 under Premier Abang Johari's bold circular economy vision, transforming waste into wealth and unlocking lucrative investment frontiers in advanced recycling, waste-to-energy infrastructure, and high-value bio-based manufacturing across the region.
Sarawak pepper, the “Black Gold of Borneo,” thrives on premium quality, not volume. Through technologies like AgriSmartEye, blockchain halal traceability, and IoT farming, it targets pharmaceutical and cosmetic markets, ensuring sustainability and global competitiveness.
Sustainable management of marine resources in Sarawak emphasizes the effectiveness of the Blue Economy policy, marine biodiversity conservation, and the Reef Ball project as key strategies. Statistics from the Department of Fisheries show a decline in marine fish landings from 157,249 metric tonnes (2014) to 96,103 metric tonnes (2024), raising concerns about the effectiveness of existing policies.
The Reef Ball project, involving more than 21,800 artificial reef units deployed along 746 km of coastline, has received international recognition and increased fish stocks by 20–30% within 3–5 years after installation. However, enforcement issues, coastal community awareness, and infrastructure shortages remain major challenges.
The journey of Sarawak pepper from vine to global market now tells a story far richer than flavour alone.
It speaks of a government that understands the future of trade, farmers equipped with 21st-century tools, and a product whose value is enhanced by its integrity.
Sarawak's temporary 50 percent royalty reduction for timber licenses provides urgent relief to a struggling sector while balancing economic preservation with long-term sustainability goals and Premier Sarawak's vision for diversification and forest conservation.
Sarawak targets ninety percent e-waste recovery by 2040 under Premier Abang Johari's bold circular economy vision, transforming waste into wealth and unlocking lucrative investment frontiers in advanced recycling, waste-to-energy infrastructure, and high-value bio-based manufacturing across the region.
Sarawak pepper, the “Black Gold of Borneo,” thrives on premium quality, not volume. Through technologies like AgriSmartEye, blockchain halal traceability, and IoT farming, it targets pharmaceutical and cosmetic markets, ensuring sustainability and global competitiveness.
Sustainable management of marine resources in Sarawak emphasizes the effectiveness of the Blue Economy policy, marine biodiversity conservation, and the Reef Ball project as key strategies. Statistics from the Department of Fisheries show a decline in marine fish landings from 157,249 metric tonnes (2014) to 96,103 metric tonnes (2024), raising concerns about the effectiveness of existing policies.
The Reef Ball project, involving more than 21,800 artificial reef units deployed along 746 km of coastline, has received international recognition and increased fish stocks by 20–30% within 3–5 years after installation. However, enforcement issues, coastal community awareness, and infrastructure shortages remain major challenges.
The journey of Sarawak pepper from vine to global market now tells a story far richer than flavour alone.
It speaks of a government that understands the future of trade, farmers equipped with 21st-century tools, and a product whose value is enhanced by its integrity.
Sarawak's temporary 50 percent royalty reduction for timber licenses provides urgent relief to a struggling sector while balancing economic preservation with long-term sustainability goals and Premier Sarawak's vision for diversification and forest conservation.
Sarawak targets ninety percent e-waste recovery by 2040 under Premier Abang Johari's bold circular economy vision, transforming waste into wealth and unlocking lucrative investment frontiers in advanced recycling, waste-to-energy infrastructure, and high-value bio-based manufacturing across the region.
Sarawak pepper, the “Black Gold of Borneo,” thrives on premium quality, not volume. Through technologies like AgriSmartEye, blockchain halal traceability, and IoT farming, it targets pharmaceutical and cosmetic markets, ensuring sustainability and global competitiveness.
Sustainable management of marine resources in Sarawak emphasizes the effectiveness of the Blue Economy policy, marine biodiversity conservation, and the Reef Ball project as key strategies. Statistics from the Department of Fisheries show a decline in marine fish landings from 157,249 metric tonnes (2014) to 96,103 metric tonnes (2024), raising concerns about the effectiveness of existing policies.
The Reef Ball project, involving more than 21,800 artificial reef units deployed along 746 km of coastline, has received international recognition and increased fish stocks by 20–30% within 3–5 years after installation. However, enforcement issues, coastal community awareness, and infrastructure shortages remain major challenges.
The journey of Sarawak pepper from vine to global market now tells a story far richer than flavour alone.
It speaks of a government that understands the future of trade, farmers equipped with 21st-century tools, and a product whose value is enhanced by its integrity.
Sarawak's temporary 50 percent royalty reduction for timber licenses provides urgent relief to a struggling sector while balancing economic preservation with long-term sustainability goals and Premier Sarawak's vision for diversification and forest conservation.
Sarawak targets ninety percent e-waste recovery by 2040 under Premier Abang Johari's bold circular economy vision, transforming waste into wealth and unlocking lucrative investment frontiers in advanced recycling, waste-to-energy infrastructure, and high-value bio-based manufacturing across the region.
Sarawak pepper, the “Black Gold of Borneo,” thrives on premium quality, not volume. Through technologies like AgriSmartEye, blockchain halal traceability, and IoT farming, it targets pharmaceutical and cosmetic markets, ensuring sustainability and global competitiveness.
Sustainable management of marine resources in Sarawak emphasizes the effectiveness of the Blue Economy policy, marine biodiversity conservation, and the Reef Ball project as key strategies. Statistics from the Department of Fisheries show a decline in marine fish landings from 157,249 metric tonnes (2014) to 96,103 metric tonnes (2024), raising concerns about the effectiveness of existing policies.
The Reef Ball project, involving more than 21,800 artificial reef units deployed along 746 km of coastline, has received international recognition and increased fish stocks by 20–30% within 3–5 years after installation. However, enforcement issues, coastal community awareness, and infrastructure shortages remain major challenges.
The journey of Sarawak pepper from vine to global market now tells a story far richer than flavour alone.
It speaks of a government that understands the future of trade, farmers equipped with 21st-century tools, and a product whose value is enhanced by its integrity.
Discover Sarawak's green economy advantage today. Our 2023 Ordinance transforms climate action into profitable ventures, attracting global capital, empowering local enterprises, positioning your business at sustainability's forefront. Invest now, lead tomorrow, reap exceptional rewards in Asia's most forward-thinking, investment-ready jurisdiction.
Transform waste into wealth. Sarawak’s smart recycling ecosystem turns sustainable practices into high-yield opportunities, attracting strategic FDI and empowering local DDI. Join the circular economy revolution where environmental stewardship meets unstoppable growth, ESG compliance, and measurable returns for global investors.
The global green economy is no longer a forecast; it is a mandate. For discerning investors seeking asymmetric growth opportunities aligned with ESG principles and the UN SDGs, Sarawak presents a compelling, de-risked, and high-upside proposition: bamboo.
Unlock unparalleled opportunities where pristine rainforests meet cutting-edge green technology. Our renewable energy leadership, robust ESG frameworks, and inclusive growth models create the perfect ecosystem for forward-thinking enterprises to thrive, innovate, and lead Southeast Asia's sustainable economic transformation today.
Unlock unparalleled growth in Sarawak, a Southeast Asian emerging powerhouse. Enjoy tax incentives, cheap green energy, and strategic market access. Never let competitors secure your future first. Invest now for maximum returns and global impact. Act today before opportunities vanish forever.
In May 2025, Sarawak took a big step in SME sustainability when Alliance Bank Malaysia Berhad partnered with the Sarawak government, InvestSarawak, Monash University Malaysia, and the UN Global Compact Network Malaysia & Brunei to publish its first Sarawak-focused ESG report—Navigating ESG in Sarawak: Insights from SMEs.