Sunday, March 8, 2026

90% Bruneianisation — But Are We Ready?

A new manpower committee quietly brings together government, universities and industry.

Behind the presentations lies a deeper question about jobs, skills and the future of the workforce.


“Graduates stand at the gates of opportunity. The ambition is clear — 90% Bruneianisation. The question is whether the bridge between education and in

 

BY MALAI HASSAN OTHMAN | KOPITALK WITH MHO

 
Last Wednesday morning, a hall slowly filled with people who rarely sit in the same room together.


Government planners. Oil and gas executives. University leaders. Technical training institutions. Regulators. Contractors.


By the time the session began, nearly a hundred participants had gathered.


The occasion was the first meeting of the Manpower Industry Steering Committee – Working Group Energy (MISC‑WG Energy), a platform bringing together stakeholders across the entire energy ecosystem.


The meeting ran from 8.00am to 11.00am, beginning with registration, followed by the recitation of Surah Al‑Fatihah, opening remarks by the Permanent Secretary (Energy) at the Prime Minister's Office, and breakout discussions on manpower demand, capability outlook and skills gaps in the sector.


At one level, it looked like a typical policy workshop.


But anyone familiar with the labour landscape in Brunei would recognise that the subject of the meeting carried far greater weight.


The issue on the table was manpower.


And behind that single word lies one of the most important questions facing the country today.

 


 

The working group itself did not emerge overnight.


It was first established in August 2019 under the Manpower Planning and Employment Council (MPEC) as part of a broader national effort to align the manpower needs of the energy industry with the country's local talent pipeline.


At the time, projections suggested that the energy and construction sectors could require around 13,000 skilled workers within five years. The figure served as an early signal that workforce preparation would become one of the defining challenges of the coming decade.


Seen from that perspective, last week's meeting was not merely a routine gathering.


It was part of a longer policy journey to prepare the national workforce for a changing industrial landscape.



A Room That Reflected the Whole Energy Ecosystem


The composition of the working group itself tells an important story.


The committee is co‑led by Hajah Farida binti Dato Seri Paduka Haji Talib, Permanent Secretary (Energy), and Pengiran Haji Jamra Weira bin Pengiran Haji Petra, Deputy Permanent Secretary (Energy).


Around them sat representatives from almost every layer of the energy sector.


Government agencies responsible for manpower planning and employment policy.


Regulatory bodies such as the Petroleum Authority and SHENA.


Universities including Universiti Brunei Darussalam and Universiti Teknologi Brunei.

Training institutions like IBTE.


And industry operators ranging from Brunei Shell Petroleum and Brunei LNG to Petronas Carigali, Hengyi Industries, Brunei Methanol Company and Brunei Fertilizer Industries.


Contractors and service providers from the oil and gas supply chain were also present.


In total, the working group brings together close to a hundred participants across government, academia and industry.


It is rare to see such a broad cross‑section of the manpower ecosystem assembled in one place.


And that alone hints at the seriousness of the issue being discussed.



A Labour Market That Appears Stable — But Tells a More Complex Story


Official statistics often suggest that Brunei's labour market remains relatively stable.


The unemployment rate in recent years has hovered around four to five percent, with roughly ten thousand individuals recorded as unemployed.


In global terms, that figure does not appear alarming.


Yet numbers sometimes conceal as much as they reveal.


One area that continues to concern policymakers is youth unemployment, where the rate has been estimated at close to 18 percent. In simple terms, nearly one in five young jobseekers struggles to find work.


For families watching their children graduate from universities and technical institutions, these numbers are more than statistics.


They represent months — sometimes years — of uncertainty while young graduates search for their first real opportunity.


Many eventually find work.


But not always immediately, and not always in roles aligned with their qualifications.


This widening gap between education and employment has quietly become one of the defining labour challenges of the current decade.



The First Subtle Insight Hidden in the Framework


One of the targets highlighted in the discussion is the ambition of achieving 90 percent Bruneianisation across all levels and skill pools in the energy sector.


On the surface, this reflects a long‑standing national aspiration — ensuring that Bruneians increasingly take up key roles in strategic industries.


But the same framework also acknowledges the need to develop detailed skills intelligence reports and identify critical competency gaps across the sector.


In other words, the system recognises that while the country aims to increase localisation, the pipeline of specialised skills may not yet be fully ready.


This creates a quiet but important tension.


Localisation cannot simply be declared.


It has to be built — through training, industry exposure and long‑term capability development.


The goal of ninety percent participation therefore represents not only a policy target, but also a challenge to the country's education and training ecosystem.



A Second, Deeper Contradiction


There is, however, another detail in the framework that deserves closer attention.


Among the key deliverables of the working group is the development of what is described as a "Workforce Alignment and Mobility Framework" — a mechanism designed to support job matching, redeployment and workforce transitions within the energy sector.


At first glance, this appears to be a sensible policy tool.


Industries evolve, projects come and go, and workers sometimes need to move from one role to another as operational demands change.


But the presence of such a framework also reveals something deeper.


It quietly acknowledges that the sector itself is entering a period of adjustment.


While the committee aims to increase Bruneian participation in the industry, the framework simultaneously prepares for the possibility that certain roles may disappear while new ones emerge.


In other words, the challenge is not only about creating jobs.


It is also about managing transitions.


The same policy architecture that seeks to strengthen localisation is also preparing to manage workforce displacement.


This dual objective reflects the complex reality of modern industries.


Economic transformation rarely moves in a straight line. As sectors evolve, some skills become less relevant while others suddenly become essential.


For policymakers, this creates a delicate balancing act.


Encouraging more Bruneians to enter the sector is important.


But ensuring that existing workers are able to adapt, retrain and move into new roles may prove just as critical.


In that sense, the committee is not simply planning manpower for growth.


It is also planning manpower for change.


And perhaps that is the more difficult task.



Early Efforts to Build the Pipeline


Several initiatives have already emerged from the manpower ecosystem surrounding the committee.


Among them is the iSkill programme, an industry‑aligned training initiative designed to strengthen the competencies of locals preparing to enter technical roles within the energy sector.


Another development is the SkillUP digital platform, introduced in 2021 to allow workers, contractors and regulators to track skills certification and career progression across the industry.


These initiatives reflect an effort to build a more structured skills pipeline — one that connects training institutions, employers and regulators through a shared competency framework.


Whether these programmes will be sufficient to close the gap between ambition and capability remains an open question.


But they represent early attempts to prepare the workforce for a sector that is steadily evolving.



A Sector Entering a Period of Transition


The timing of the committee's work is also significant.


The global energy industry is undergoing structural change.


Traditional oil and gas operations are becoming increasingly automated and technologically advanced. At the same time, new areas such as downstream petrochemicals, energy transition technologies and digital systems are emerging across the sector.


For Brunei, this transformation presents both opportunity and challenge.


The energy sector remains the backbone of the economy.


But the skills required to sustain that backbone are changing.


Engineers today must understand digital systems.


Technicians must operate increasingly sophisticated equipment.


Managers must navigate both operational efficiency and environmental expectations.


Preparing the workforce for this evolving landscape cannot be left to individual companies alone.


It requires coordination across the entire ecosystem.



The Wawasan 2035 Connection


All of this takes place against a larger national backdrop.


Brunei's long‑term development blueprint, Wawasan 2035, envisions a highly educated and skilled population supported by a dynamic and sustainable economy.


Yet with less than a decade remaining before that milestone year, the workforce question is becoming increasingly urgent.


Economic diversification initiatives — from downstream petrochemicals to digital industries — all depend on the same fundamental resource.

People.


Without the right skills in the right places, even the most ambitious development strategies will struggle to gain traction.



The Real Measure of Success


In the end, the success of such initiatives will not be measured by how many meetings are held or how many reports are produced.


It will be measured by outcomes.


Whether graduates are able to move smoothly into meaningful careers.


Whether experienced workers can adapt as industries evolve.


Whether companies can find the skills they need without constantly looking beyond the country's borders.


And whether the next generation of Bruneians sees opportunity rather than uncertainty when they enter the labour market.


Because manpower planning, ultimately, is not about frameworks or committees.

It is about people.


And the quiet meeting held last Wednesday may one day be remembered not for its presentations or breakout sessions — but for the question it forced everyone in the room to confront.


Do we have the workforce we need for the future we say we want? (MHO/03/2026)

 

 

Bintang Yang Mengetuk Dalam Gelap

Pagi 18 Ramadhan itu suasananya tenang.

Langit masih gelap, dan hanya satu bintang kelihatan di atas.

Dalam kelas taddabur subuh, Surah At-Tariq membuka satu renungan yang sangat sederhana tetapi sangat mendalam:

Kadang-kadang manusia hanya melihat bintang apabila langit menjadi gelap.

Mungkin begitu juga dengan kehidupan.

Kadang-kadang petunjuk Allah hanya benar-benar kelihatan ketika hidup sedang melalui malamnya.

KopiTalk with MHO


Pagi 18 Ramadhan itu suasananya tenang. Udara subuh masih dingin dan langit belum sepenuhnya terang ketika kelas taddabur bersama Ustaz Malik Al Amin bermula.

Ramadhan sering membawa manusia memandang langit dengan cara yang berbeza.

Dalam suasana sederhana itu, perbincangan kami menyentuh tafsir Surah At-Tariq, surah ke-86 dalam Al-Qur'an.

Surah ini pendek, tetapi maknanya dalam. Ia bermula dengan satu sumpah yang sejak dahulu mengundang manusia berfikir:

"Demi langit dan bintang yang datang pada waktu malam."

Perkataan At-Tariq membawa maksud bintang yang muncul dalam gelap malam—seolah-olah sesuatu yang datang mengetuk dalam kesunyian.

Dalam tafsir para ulama, bintang ini bukan sekadar fenomena alam. Ia menjadi simbol cahaya yang menembusi kegelapan.

Jika direnungkan, kehidupan manusia juga sering melalui "malam" seperti ini.

Ada masa kita berjalan dalam gelap—berdepan tekanan hidup, kegagalan, atau kesusahan yang tidak diketahui orang lain. Kadang-kadang manusia merasa seolah-olah dia sendirian.

Namun Surah At-Tariq mengingatkan bahawa tidak ada satu pun perjalanan manusia yang terlepas daripada perhatian Allah.

Ayat keempat menyebut bahawa setiap manusia mempunyai penjaga yang memerhatikannya. Para ulama mentafsirkan penjaga ini sebagai malaikat yang mencatat setiap amal manusia—baik mahupun buruk.

Kesedaran ini memberi perspektif penting tentang kehidupan.

Dalam dunia yang sering mengukur kejayaan melalui pujian manusia, kita mudah lupa bahawa penilaian sebenar bukan datang daripada manusia.

Seseorang mungkin bekerja keras tetapi tidak dihargai.

Seseorang mungkin berbuat baik tetapi tidak dipuji.

Seseorang mungkin memikul kesusahan hidup secara diam.

Namun dalam pandangan Allah, tiada satu pun usaha manusia yang hilang daripada catatan.

Surah ini juga mengajak manusia merenung asal-usulnya. Allah menyuruh manusia memikirkan bagaimana mereka diciptakan—daripada setitis air yang hina.

Peringatan ini membawa mesej kuat tentang kerendahan diri.

Dalam kehidupan moden, manusia sering terperangkap dalam ilusi kekuatan. 

Apabila seseorang mencapai kedudukan, kekayaan atau kuasa, dia mudah merasa semuanya hasil kebijaksanaannya sendiri.

Tetapi Surah At-Tariq mengingatkan bahawa manusia pada asalnya datang daripada sesuatu yang sangat kecil dan lemah.

Segala kekuatan yang kita miliki hanyalah pinjaman daripada Allah.

Ayat seterusnya menyentuh satu perkara yang sangat mendalam - tentang rahsia manusia.

Allah menyatakan bahawa suatu hari nanti semua rahsia akan didedahkan. Bukan sahaja perbuatan yang dilihat manusia, tetapi juga niat dan apa yang tersembunyi dalam hati.

Dalam kehidupan seharian, manusia mungkin mampu menyembunyikan sesuatu daripada orang lain - kesalahan yang dilakukan secara diam, niat yang tidak diketahui, atau perasaan yang disimpan dalam hati.

 

Namun di hadapan Allah, tiada satu pun yang benar-benar tersembunyi.

 

Kesedaran ini membentuk nilai penting dalam kehidupan—kejujuran dalaman.

 

Ia mengajar manusia bahawa integriti bukan sekadar tentang apa yang dilihat orang, tetapi tentang siapa kita ketika tiada siapa yang memerhati.

 

Pada akhirnya, Surah At-Tariq membawa manusia kembali kepada satu hakikat yang sangat sederhana tetapi mendalam.

 

Manusia sering merasa kuat ketika hidup berjalan lancar.

 

Tetapi apabila ujian datang - kehilangan pekerjaan, masalah keluarga, penyakit atau kegagalan—barulah manusia sedar betapa lemahnya dirinya.

 

Surah ini mengingatkan bahawa tanpa pertolongan Allah, manusia sebenarnya tidak mempunyai kekuatan apa-apa.

 

Mungkin itulah sebabnya Allah memulakan surah ini dengan bintang yang muncul pada waktu malam.

 

Kerana dalam perjalanan hidup manusia, kadang-kadang cahaya petunjuk hanya kelihatan apabila langit kehidupan menjadi gelap.

 

Dan mungkin sebab itu juga, setiap kali Ramadhan tiba dan manusia kembali memandang langit subuh dengan hati yang tenang, bintang di langit malam seakan mengingatkan bahawa dalam kegelapan hidup sekali pun, Allah tidak pernah meninggalkan langit tanpa cahaya. (MHO/03/2026)

 

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Beyond the Address – Final Reflection

At first hearing, the National Day titah sounded like a familiar list of priorities — logistics, digital transformation, food security and human capital.


But read carefully, the speech reveals something more intriguing.

Across six reflections in this KopiTalk series, a quieter narrative begins to emerge — one that hints at how Brunei’s next economic chapter may unfold as the horizon of Wawasan 2035 draws closer.

Sometimes, the most important messages in a national address are not spoken loudly.

They are hidden in the structure of the speech itself.

The Decade of Delivery

    Six essays. One titah. One question:

Can Brunei turn vision into momentum before the horizon of Wawasan 2035 arrives?


By Malai Hassan Othman | KopiTalk with MHO 

 

When His Majesty delivered the National Day titah this year, the speech moved steadily across several themes: maritime logistics, digital transformation, food security, and human capital.

 

To many listeners, these sounded like familiar elements of the national development conversation surrounding Wawasan Brunei 2035. After all, these pillars have been discussed for years in policy frameworks, government initiatives and economic roadmaps.

 

But read more carefully, the address appears to mark something more significant than a restatement of priorities.

 

It marks a transition.

 

For much of the past decade, national discourse around Wawasan 2035 has focused on planning — identifying sectors of opportunity, designing strategies and laying the groundwork for diversification beyond oil and gas.

 

The years ahead, however, belong to a different phase.

 

They belong to execution.

 

With the horizon of 2035 now visibly approaching, the question facing the country is no longer simply what must be done. That question has largely been answered.

 

The question now is how quickly those ambitions can be translated into tangible outcomes.

Across the speech, the themes highlighted by His Majesty form a quiet architecture of transformation.

 

Maritime logistics represents the physical networks connecting Brunei to global trade routes. Digital transformation reflects the growing centrality of data, artificial intelligence and technological capability in shaping modern economies. Food security emphasises resilience in an increasingly uncertain global environment. Human capital underscores the importance of talent, skills and education as the engine of long-term progress.

 

Each of these pillars carries its own significance.

 

But together they tell a broader story.

 

They suggest that Brunei’s next phase of development will depend not on a single breakthrough industry but on the strengthening of interconnected systems that support economic vitality and national resilience.

 

This shift is subtle, but meaningful.

 

Historically, many resource-based economies have relied heavily on dominant sectors to drive growth. Diversification, however, requires a different approach. It demands the creation of ecosystems — logistics networks that facilitate trade, digital platforms that enable new businesses, agricultural systems that enhance self-reliance and educational institutions that cultivate talent.

 

The titah appears to recognise this systemic transformation.

 

Yet beyond the structure of these priorities lies another message — one that becomes clearer when viewed against the timeline of Wawasan 2035.

 

For the first time since the vision was announced, the target year no longer feels distant.

 

It sits within the planning horizon of institutions, businesses and young professionals now entering the workforce.

 

In practical terms, the coming years represent what might be described as the decade of delivery.

 

Strategies that were once long-term aspirations must now begin producing measurable outcomes.

 

Infrastructure must translate into connectivity.


Digital investments must translate into innovation and productivity.


Agricultural initiatives must translate into resilience and domestic capability.


Education reforms must translate into a workforce prepared for new industries.

 

In quiet discussions among policymakers and industry practitioners, a common observation often surfaces. The challenge rarely lies in identifying ideas or drafting strategies. Brunei, like many countries, has produced thoughtful plans across multiple sectors.

 

The more complex task lies in turning those plans into momentum.

 

This is where the significance of the titah becomes clearer.

 

Rather than announcing a dramatic new economic doctrine, the speech signals expectation that the systems already being built will begin to move with greater coherence and pace.

 

The tone remains measured and constructive. But the repeated emphasis on strengthening efforts, intensifying initiatives and enhancing competitiveness suggests an awareness that the coming years will be decisive.

 

Not because the vision itself is uncertain.

 

But because time has become a strategic factor.

 

Across the five reflections in this series, we have examined different dimensions of that transformation — logistics, digital infrastructure, food resilience and human capital. Each represents a pillar supporting Brunei’s aspiration to build a dynamic and sustainable economy.

 

Yet the final lesson of the titah may be surprisingly simple.

 

National transformation rarely arrives in a single dramatic moment. More often it emerges gradually, as institutions adapt, industries evolve and societies respond to changing circumstances.

 

The years ahead therefore represent an opportunity — not only to implement policies but to shape the rhythm of national progress.

 

If the earlier years of Wawasan 2035 were devoted to vision and preparation, the years ahead will test something deeper.

 

They will test momentum.

 

The titah does not announce a new destination.

 

That destination has long been clear.

 

What it does suggest is that the nation is entering the stage where vision must steadily translate into reality.

 

And in that sense, the message of the address may be less about where Brunei hopes to go.

 

It is about the pace at which the country is prepared to move.

 


 

Epilogue

The vision has been drawn.

 

The coming decade will show how firmly the nation can walk toward it.

 

Friday, March 6, 2026

Beyond the Address – Part 5: The System Test Behind Wawasan 2035

 Ports. Data centres. Food systems. Human capital.

Across five essays, one message from the titah slowly comes into focus: the challenge facing Brunei is no longer identifying the pillars of diversification — it is whether the entire system can move together fast enough before the horizon of Wawasan 2035.


By Malai Hassan Othman
KopiTalk with MHO

 

By the time the titah turned to maritimelogistics, digital transformation, food security and human capital, a quiet pattern had already begun to emerge. These were not merely separate sectors of development. Read together, they resemble the layers of a single system — the architecture of an economy seeking to move beyond its long dependence on oil and gas.

 

In earlier parts of this series, we looked at each pillar individually. Maritime logistics represents the physical connectivity linking Brunei to global trade. Digital infrastructure provides the technological backbone of a modern economy. Food security strengthens national resilience against external shocks. Human capital ensures that the system is operated by a skilled and adaptable workforce.

 

Yet taken together, these pillars raise a deeper question: what ensures that they work in concert?

 

The answer may lie in something rarely mentioned directly but increasingly implied in national discourse — the ability of the entire system to move with coherence and speed.

 

Across the titah, one rhetorical pattern appears repeatedly. Efforts must be strengthened. Competitiveness must be enhanced. Initiatives must be intensified. Coordination must improve. On the surface, these are expressions of encouragement. But when they appear across multiple sectors, they form a pattern that seasoned observers recognise as a subtle signal to the system.

 

The message is not that the direction of national policy is wrong. On the contrary, the vision remains clear. What the language suggests is that the pace of execution has now become the next critical challenge.

 

This is understandable when viewed against the horizon of Wawasan Brunei 2035. The vision, launched more than a decade ago, seeks to build a dynamic and sustainable economy supported by a highly educated and skilled population. With less than ten years remaining before that milestone, the emphasis naturally begins to shift from planning to delivery.

 

In quiet conversations with several policy observers over the past few years, a similar reflection often surfaces. Brunei does not lack ideas, strategies or frameworks. What determines progress is how quickly different parts of the system are able to move together once the direction is set.

 

This is where the idea of a Whole-of-Government and Whole-of-Nation approach becomes increasingly relevant.

 

The sectors highlighted in the titah span multiple domains of policy and administration. Ports involve transport authorities, customs agencies and trade institutions. Digital transformation involves regulators, telecommunications providers, technology firms and universities. 

 

Food security requires cooperation between agricultural agencies, research institutions, investors and farmers. Human capital development connects the education system directly with the needs of industry.

 

Each element belongs to a different part of the national machinery. Yet they must ultimately function as one integrated ecosystem.

 

This may be the most strategic implication of the titah. Economic transformation is no longer only about identifying promising sectors. It is about ensuring that the institutions, policies and people responsible for those sectors are able to operate in alignment.

 

Countries that successfully diversify their economies often discover that the decisive factor is not the availability of ideas or resources, but the agility of their systems. The ability of government agencies to coordinate effectively, of industries to respond quickly to new opportunities, and of the workforce to adapt to emerging skills demands becomes the true engine of change.

 

The speech therefore reads not only as a statement of national priorities but also as a gentle reminder that the next phase of development will depend on the efficiency of the system itself.

 

Maritime ports may expand, digital networks may grow and agricultural technologies may modernise. But without institutional agility and collective effort, these initiatives risk advancing at different speeds.

 

And that brings us back to the quiet question implied throughout the titah.

 

Can the entire national system move together quickly enough to realise the aspirations of Wawasan 2035?

 

Over the course of this five-part reflection, we have looked at four pillars highlighted in the address — logistics, digital infrastructure, food security and human capital. Each represents a strategic layer of national resilience.

 

But perhaps the deeper message of the titah lies not in any single pillar.

 

It lies in the understanding that all of them must advance together.

 

Infrastructure builds capability.


Technology accelerates connectivity.


Agriculture strengthens resilience.


Human capital powers innovation.

 

Yet none of these pillars can stand alone.

 

In the end, the real test of Wawasan 2035 may not be whether the vision is correct. The vision has long been clear.

 

The real test is whether the system — government, industry and society — can move with the clarity, coordination and urgency required to turn that vision into lived reality before the clock reaches 2035.

 

And perhaps that, quietly but unmistakably, is the signal embedded in the titah. (MHO/03/2026)

 


Thursday, March 5, 2026

Beyond the Address – Part 4: The Human Layer That Will Decide 2035

Maritime logistics.
Digital infrastructure.
Food security.

Three pillars of resilience are highlighted in the titah.

But beneath them all lies a quieter challenge — building the people capable of running the future economy. With less than a decade to Wawasan 2035, the real question may no longer be what Brunei plans to build, but whether the nation is ready to operate it.

 


By Malai Hassan Othman | KopiTalk with MHO

 

In recent days, much attention has been given to the economic signals contained in the titah delivered during the National Day celebrations. Many observers naturally focused on the visible pillars highlighted in the address — strengthening maritime logistics, advancing the digital economy, and enhancing food security.

 

Yet beneath these sectors lies another layer that may ultimately determine whether the nation's ambitions are realised. Infrastructure and industries can be planned, financed, and built, but the people who must operate, sustain, and expand them cannot be produced overnight.

 

In the titah, His Majesty the Sultan underscored the importance of human capital as a central element of the nation's development journey.

 

"Sebagai dokongan ke arah ini, sistem pendidikan negara perlu terus melalui proses penambahbaikan yang strategik supaya mampu melahirkan modal insan yang berkemahiran, berdaya saing dan bersedia menghadapi cabaran ekonomi masa depan."

 

Translated broadly, the message is clear: the education system must continuously evolve to produce skilled and competitive individuals capable of navigating the economic realities of the future.

 

This emphasis places human capital at the center of the national transformation agenda. Maritime ports, digital infrastructure, and agri-tech zones may form the physical backbone of diversification, but it is the availability of capable talent that determines whether these sectors truly flourish.

 

Across many industries, employers often remark that the challenge is not merely creating opportunities but ensuring the right capabilities are available to support them. At the same time, young graduates frequently express uncertainty about where their skills fit within an economy that is itself still evolving. Between these two perspectives lies the central task of human capital development.

 

The issue is not unique to Brunei. Many countries navigating economic transition encounter a similar dilemma — how to ensure that education, training, and industry needs move in step. When alignment is achieved, new sectors grow rapidly. When gaps persist, infrastructure may advance faster than the talent pipeline required to sustain it.

 

In the context of Wawasan Brunei 2035, this alignment becomes even more significant. The vision calls for a well-educated and highly skilled population as one of its core pillars. Achieving that goal is not simply about expanding educational access but about ensuring that knowledge, technical skills, and adaptability evolve alongside the economy itself.

 

This is why the human layer is often less visible but arguably the most decisive. Ports can be built within a few years. Data centers can be installed within months. Agricultural technology zones can be planned and developed within a decade. But cultivating the experience, confidence, and competence required to operate these systems takes far longer.

 

One young graduate recently remarked in an online discussion that the challenge today is not necessarily obtaining qualifications, but finding industries ready to absorb them. Whether anecdotal or widespread, such sentiments reflect a question many young Bruneians quietly ask: where do their skills fit in the economy that is being built?

 

This is where policy, educational institutions, and industry must increasingly move together. Universities and technical institutes shape the pipeline of knowledge. Businesses translate that knowledge into productivity and innovation. Government policies provide the framework within which both operate.

 

When these elements work in concert, the results can be powerful. Countries that successfully align education, entrepreneurship, and industry often see entire new sectors emerge within a generation.

 

The titah therefore reads not only as a call for sectoral development but also as a reminder that the human dimension must advance at the same pace. The three economic pillars highlighted earlier in this series — maritime logistics, digital infrastructure, and food security — all depend ultimately on people capable of managing complex systems, adapting to technological change, and creating new value.

 

In many ways, this human layer may become the quiet test of the nation's progress over the coming decade.

 

After all, buildings and infrastructure can be constructed relatively quickly. Preparing people to operate them is a much longer journey.

 

Maritime ports may expand, digital networks may grow, and food systems may modernise. Yet in the end, the success of Wawasan Brunei 2035 will not be measured only by the infrastructure the nation builds. It will be measured by whether the people of the nation are ready — and prepared in time — to run it. (MHO/03/2026)