Asia Pacific's energy transition is progressing with significant investments in renewables, but rising energy demand and reliance on fossil fuels pose challenges to achieving net-zero goals.
The energy sector is a major driver of global warming, contributing three-quarters of total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions globally. As such, efforts to decarbonise the sector have naturally risen to the top of the agenda for almost all governments and corporates as they strive to meet their climate goals.
The environmental impacts of the energy sector may worsen further, given the accelerated adoption of energy-intensive technologies like artificial intelligence (AI), data centers and block chain technologies, all of which are contributing to increased demand for electricity. The International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates that these technologies could double their electricity consumption by 2026, roughly equivalent to Japan’s annual energy usage.
Such outsized demand could lead to increased dependence on fossil fuels-based power production as clean energy sources lack the scale needed to match the pace of increases in energy requirements. As per the Energy Institute’s Statistical Review of World Energy 2024 - written with the support of KPMG - the growth of renewable energy consumption and electricity demand are outpacing total primary energy production. And despite renewables claiming ever larger portions of total energy consumption, the world’s energy-related emissions exceeded 40 GtCO2 for the very first time in 2023.