Indonesia’s B50 program is described by senior Energy Ministry officials as the first mandatory 50% biofuel blend program in the world, drawing study visits from countries seeking to replicate the model.
No final decision on reactor technology, plant location, or construction contract has been announced; Malaysia’s nuclear programme remains in the structured pre-deployment feasibility phase.
Japan’s POWERR Asia framework, endorsed by Laos at the June 10 Tokyo summit, targets both short-term fuel security and long-term structural energy resilience across Asia.
The June 15 Laos nuclear agreement expands Rosatom’s ASEAN presence at a moment when regional energy security concerns are reshaping how governments evaluate long-term generation options.
Thailand's parliament opened March 14 with Bhumjaithai holding a coalition majority of around 291 seats. Two energy schemes requiring prime ministerial sign-off have been on hold since December.
Peak Energy acquired nearly 10 MW of operating Singapore rooftop solar from Maiora on March 12, backed by Stonepeak's $84 billion infrastructure platform. The deal targets corporate buyers needing fixed-price locally sourced power.
The Energy of Change Summit on March 10 covered generation equipment, grid infrastructure, and technology cooperation across three distinct layers of Vietnam’s power transition, all in a single announcement.
The Philippines generates 62% of its electricity from coal, with over 80% of that coal imported, meaning grid price exposure to global commodity markets extends well beyond the current LNG crisis.
Thailand and Myanmar have introduced fuel conservation policies as global energy prices rise. The measures aim to manage domestic demand and stabilize supply.
Analysts say recent geopolitical tensions are highlighting Southeast Asia’s reliance on imported fuels. The discussion is increasingly focused on energy diversification.