GENEVA, March 19 (Reuters) – Growth in world trade in goods will slow down markedly to 1.9% this year from 4.6% in 2025 and could decelerate even more if the Middle East war continues to โpush energy prices higher and disrupt global transport, a World Trade Organization report said on Thursday.
Last year โa surge in artificial intelligence-related trade and goods front-loading to avoid a slew of U.S. tariffs enabled a better-than-expected growth performance.
While global trade remains โresilient, buoyed by trade in AI-related products, the growth forecast is under pressure from the expanding U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said.
If crude oil and liquefied natural gas prices remain high throughout 2026 due to the conflict, global trade in goods could slow further to 1.4%, WTO economists said.
A prolonged blockade of the Strait of Hormuz by Iran, choking โone-third of fertilizer urea imports, risks hitting โ major producers like India, Thailand, Brazil, fuelling food security risks, the WTO report said.
Sustained high energy prices could shave 0.5 percentage points off global merchandise growth, with Asian and European fuel-reliant โ importers hit hardest.
Services trade also faces a 0.7-point drop from growth forecasts of 4.8% to 4.1% due to shipping and flights disruption, the report found. Last year services trade grew by 5.3%.
CONTINUED AI TRADE GROWTH A “BIG QUESTION MARK”
Last year, world merchandise trade โgrew โat nearly double the forecast rate as a surge in demand โfor AI-related goods, such as chips and semiconductors, โoffset the impact of U.S. tariffs and subsequent trade turmoil, the report stated.
Trade in AI-enabling goods accounted for 42% of global trade growth in 2025, despite representing only one-sixth of global trade. It increased by 21.9% year-on-year to $4.18 trillion in 2025, according to the report.
However, the ongoing strength of investment in the sector is “a big question mark for 2026 and beyond,” the report said.
This year, goods and services trade and global GDP are forecast to grow at around โthe same rate – of 2.7% for trade and 2.8% for GDP – โfollowing last year’s respective growth of 4.7% and 2.9%.
Asia will lead merchandise โimport growth in 2026 with imports up 3.3% โand exports up 3.5%, followed by Africa with 3.2% imports, 1.2% exports, the WTO forecasts. โNorth America will stay flat at 0.3% imports, the โreport estimates.
Some 72% of world โtrade is being conducted on a Most-Favoured-Nation basis after falling from about 80% at the start of last year when Trump imposed higher import tariffs, WTO economists estimate. MFN requires WTO members to treat others equally.






