Press release

Accelerating the climate transition: Southeast Asia needs to act now and chart its path to Net Zero

Accelerating the climate transition: Southeast Asia needs to act now and chart its path to Net Zero

$2 trillion infrastructure investments needed over the next decade to enable SEA’s sustainable transition and to close the region’s 3-4Gt gap to Paris-aligned annual emissions. Accelerating the energy transition, valuing nature, and transforming SEA’s agri-food system could address up to ~90% of the region’s emissions.

  • Eylül 29, 2021
  • min read

Press release

Accelerating the climate transition: Southeast Asia needs to act now and chart its path to Net Zero

Singapore – September 29, 2021 – 2021 is the year of climate action as Net Zero takes center stage globally, and conversations shift from challenges to solutions and action. Southeast Asia (SEA) is gaining relevance on the global stage as a critical piece of the Net Zero solution. Over the past year, the scales have tipped with COVID-19 bringing issues of climate change and resilience to the fore. SEA’s key players have responded in step, with governments, businesses, and investors all committing to new actions. While the path from aspiration to results will be one of immense challenge, enablers such as SEA’s voluntary carbon markets and the growing green data revolution will be critical in accelerating the region’s decarbonization journey.

These are among the findings of a new report from Bain & Company, Microsoft and TemasekSoutheast Asia’s Green Economy: Opportunities on the Road to Net Zero released today.

SEA needs to crystallize the road to Net Zero

The urgent need for SEA to act is clear. SEA experiences a disproportionate amount of climate disasters and extreme weather events, which have significant impact on the region’s economies. COVID-19 has accelerated climate awareness in SEA, reinforcing the need to develop more resilient, localized supply chains, improve food security, and move away from the business as usual (BAU) approach governments have taken in the past in response to external shocks such as climate events.

National governments have begun to mobilize, recognizing the projected ~17-37% average GDP loss from climate-related events by 2050 under 2.0-3.2°C global warming scenarios. Landmark announcements have been made as the climate emergency mounts: Singapore has rolled out the Green Plan 2030, Indonesia and Laos have announced Net Zero targets and carbon pricing schemes are either implemented or under consideration in six countries in the region. Corporates are also leading through action. Family-run businesses, which make up more than 85% of SEA businesses valued at over $1 billion, are poised to play a pivotal role in accelerating the transition given shorter chains of command, lower external pressures, and new generational mindsets.

“While we are seeing many encouraging changes in Southeast Asia’s Green Economy and the overall trend is positive, there is still much more to be done,” said Dale Hardcastle, a partner in Bain & Company’s Singapore office and co-director of the firm’s Global Sustainability Innovation Center (GSIC). “Southeast Asia presents specific conditions which provide both challenges and opportunities for a full-scale sustainability transformation. The region needs to act now and take three steps to translate these opportunities into tangible results: define its road to Net Zero, catalyze the journey and outcomes together, and unlock capital flows.”

Net Zero challenges and opportunities

Moving forward, accelerating the region’s energy transition, valuing nature, and transforming SEA’s agri-food system could address up to ~90% of the region’s emissions while unlocking new economic opportunities. SEA must move from resource extraction to electrification, leveraging opportunities in energy efficiency, renewables such as solar and wind, grid modernization, rethinking transport, and emerging carbon capture solutions and hydrogen. Technological and financial innovations will help SEA ‘better price’ its large, undervalued natural resources, which can serve as global carbon sinks and biodiversity banks. Agriculture is a major contributor to SEA’s economy, but also emissions. To decarbonize, SEA must engage and empower smallholder farmers to adopt sustainable practices, while seeking to establish itself as a global food tech hub.

To accelerate SEA’s decarbonization journey, scaling the region’s voluntary carbon markets is an important catalyst. This area holds immense potential, particularly in nature-based solutions, with innovation accelerating. By 2030, ~$10 billion in revenue opportunities across the value chain may be generated from SEA offsets.

Further, a growing green data revolution will drive impact as the availability of massive amounts of data and increasingly advanced models continue to scale the ability to monitor and accelerate progress towards sustainability goals. There are ‘green shoots’ in digital innovation taking place in SEA, with Singapore’s digital twin and the geospatial mapping and remote monitoring of the region’s vast forests as prime examples.

“Sustainability has never been more important, as businesses evaluate and embrace the use of data, sensors, and cloud computing to improve their carbon footprint and supply chain visibility. The opportunity for Southeast Asia is to move from awareness to industry standards and policy models. This report by Bain, Microsoft, and Temasek aims to be the catalyst that kindles the necessary conversation and application of carbon goals and green business decisions. We’re doing our part to accelerate the world’s transformation to a Net Zero future, with Clean Energy Startups and our Climate Innovation Fund, committing $1 billion of capital to invest in meaningful, measurable climate solutions. Microsoft is also investing $50 million in AI for Earth to put AI in the hands of those working to directly address sustainability challenges. We’re excited by the incredible commitment we’re seeing from organizations leaning in to collaborate and co-innovate with us, as we catalyze the region and transform industries and communities,” said Lorena Paglia, Sustainability & Customer Experience Regional Engagement Leader for Microsoft in Asia Pacific.

Unlocking green capital flows

Investors and financiers throughout the region are accelerating the integration of sustainability into their investing strategies as they face pressure from various stakeholders. Over the past 18 months, SEA investors’ sentiments on sustainable investing has begun to shift, in recognition of the value of sustainability: 57% integrate sustainability in their investing thesis while 19% identify as impact investors in 2021. Mindsets are in turn starting to generate results - ~$9 billion was deployed towards green opportunities in the region in 2020.

But we have a long way to go. ~$2 trillion investments over the next decade is required to build out SEA’s infrastructure for a sustainable transition. Governments cannot do this alone – ADB estimates ~40% of infrastructure investments in Asia need to come from the private sector.

“Green fundraising and capital deployment are picking up in the region, but we have a long way to go. Less than one per cent of the estimated $2 trillion needed has been deployed to green businesses and infrastructure assets last year,” said Dr Steve Howard, Chief Sustainability Officer of Temasek. “The road to Net Zero will have transition costs, but in return there will be significant opportunities, both economic and social, if the private, public and philanthropic sectors work together to unlock the region’s full potential.”

Looking ahead

Achieving Net Zero as a region demands individual action by businesses, investors, governments, and communities, as well as collective action at an ecosystem level.

Three ingredients are crucial for collective action:

  1. Ecosystem-wide co-innovation: accelerate commercialization of low-carbon tech that suits SEA’s needs, such as agri-tech and carbon capture; increase sharing of data/tools/standards through value chain-wide alliances; and mobilize public and private capital to conserve and restore SEA’s natural carbon sinks
  2. Collective transition support, leveraging public-private partnerships and blended financing: improve access to capital and build capabilities of SMEs/smallholders, mitigate impact of stranded assets for hard-to-abate sectors, and upskill and retrain SEA’s workforce for the green economy
  3. Regional collaboration: develop a holistic SEA Net Zero transition plan, establish a cross-border carbon trading system, and reassess energy security by exploring a regional grid to more efficiently connect demand to supply

The sustainability journey holds immense potential for SEA to transform locally and make a measurable contribution globally.

The path to Net Zero is clear – decisive action is now needed to make a sustainable SEA a reality.

Editor’s note: For more information or to arrange an interview with Mr. Dale Hardcastle, please contact Nicholas Worley at nicholas.worley@bain.com or +852 2978 8830.

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