Published: 15:28, February 10, 2021 | Updated: 01:54, June 5, 2023
WEF prepares for August summit in Singapore, size unsure
By Reuters

In this file photo taken on Jan 24, 2012, a guard stands next to a logo of the World Economic Forum (WEF) at the Congress Center in the Swiss resort of Davos. (FABRICE COFFRINI / AFP)

SINGAPORE - Having delayed its "Davos" summit in Singapore twice already, the World Economic Forum is pressing on with plans to gather in August, but how big the meeting is will depend on how COVID-19 concerns play out, the organization’s president said.

READ MORE: WEF postpones annual summit in Singapore to August

Speaking to Reuters in Singapore late Tuesday after holding preparatory meetings with the city-state’s government, Borge Brende said he hoped the summit would attract at least 1,000 leaders from politics, business and civil society.

...All participants that are eligible for participation at our events will be welcomed, vaccinated or not vaccinated.

Borge Brende, president, World Economic Forum

Brende said entry requirements and health regimes in Singapore will ultimately be decided by the government, but added: “all participants that are eligible for participation at our events will be welcomed, vaccinated or not vaccinated.”

WEF has twice pushed back its special meeting in Singapore, initially scheduled for mid-May, following the announcement last year it was moving from its usual home in the Swiss alps due to the pandemic situation in Europe.

The summit is due to return to the hard-to-reach ski town from where it takes its informal name in January 2022.

Asked if the Singapore event would be further delayed if it cannot go ahead in August, Brende said: “No, we have no plans to delay it...We can scale it up or we can scale it down.

“I think it’s more a question of how big of a meeting can we have in August. Of course, we would like to have at least 1,000 participants to have a bit of size.”

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Brende and a small delegation of WEF officials stayed at the Marina Bay Sands during this week’s flying visit, an iconic surfboard-shaped hotel, casino and conference center that Brende said was the organization’s preferred venue for the summit.

While Singapore has had its borders largely shut for almost a year, WEF organizers hope attendees will be able to avoid quarantines through rigorous testing and by staying in a "bubble" cut off from the local population.

Brende said his discussions with senior government officials this week, including Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, had covered health precautions and topics for the meeting.

The Southeast Asian nation, which has largely tamed the virus locally, has said it will consider relaxing travel restrictions for people who have been vaccinated against COVID-19, including for those attending the WEF summit.