Rapport
Southeast Asia’s (SEA) green economy is no longer a future opportunity—it is already scaling at pace. The market is valued at approximately $290 billion today and is projected to reach $430 billion by 2030. Demand is scaling rapidly across power, transport, and industry, with capital following where commercial viability is clear. Yet outcomes remain uneven—not because ambition or funding are lacking—but because systems are struggling to convert available capital into delivered projects.
Written in collaboration with
Written in collaboration with

At the same time, the global context has shifted. A more fragmented policy environment, rising geopolitical tensions, and a renewed focus on energy security and economic competitiveness are reshaping how and where investment flows. In this new reality, capital follows demand, bankability, and speed to delivery—not mandates. For SEA, this marks a fundamental shift in the calculus of the green economy.
This report explores how SEA can move into the next chapter of its green economy transition with rising demand from EVs, data centers/AI, and other sectors—one defined by execution at speed and scale. The central challenge is no longer mobilizing capital but ensuring that systems and market architectures keep pace with demand and investment commitments.
However, while demand from these sources is set to materialize in one to three years as region seeks to capture investment related to AI and electrification, grid infrastructure takes five to 15 years to build. This mismatch has made the grid a key binding constraint that increasingly determines where capital flows.
This report focuses on two critical questions:
How can SEA deliver power fast enough to absorb demand?
More than 100 TWh of new electricity demand is expected to arrive by 2030, driven by data centers, electric vehicles (EVs), and industrial clusters. However, while demand from these sources is set to materialize in one to three years, grid infrastructure takes five to fifteen years to build. This mismatch has made the grid a key binding constraint that increasingly determines where capital flows.
How can SEA convert EV demand into value capture?
SEA’s EV market has reached an inflection point, with several countries now among the fastest-growing globally. Yet approximately 70% of EV value continues to flow outside the region, and SEA captures only about 2% of global EV production. Original equipment manufacturer platform decisions are being locked in between 2025 and 2028, narrowing the region’s window to translate demand into durable industrial advantage.
Across both the grid and EV ecosystems, a common challenge emerges: Capital is not the constraint, conversion is. Approximately $540 billion in investments have been announced in SEA’s power and EV value chains; however, there is a 35% gap between announced and realized capex, driven by grid bottlenecks, permitting delays, and fragmented market structures.
The report introduces a sequencing approach—capture, bridge, and destination—to address this challenge. It explains how SEA can secure near-term demand within current system constraints while building the infrastructure required for long-term scale. This will require coordinated action across policy, capital, and delivery, alongside deeper regional integration across SEA and the wider Asia-Pacific region to unlock scale and competitiveness.
If executed effectively, SEA can unlock an additional $80 billion in investment by 2030 and strengthen its position in the global green economy. However, the window is time-bound. Decisions made over the next 24–36 months will determine whether capital compounds—or whether it moves elsewhere.
About Standard Chartered
Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore is part of an international banking group, with a presence in 54 of the world’s most dynamic markets. Our purpose is to drive commerce and prosperity through our unique diversity, and our heritage and values are expressed in our brand promise, here for good. The Bank has a history of 167 years in Singapore, where we opened our first branch in 1859. In October 1999, we were among the first international banks to receive a Qualifying Full Bank (QFB) license, an endorsement of the Group's longstanding commitment to our business in the country.