Padang & Co, a Singapore-based innovation company, has unveiled its Southeast Asia Green Economy Landscape 2025 report, mapping 1,089 startups, scale-ups, and SMEs across six countries. The report identifies seven high-impact sectors crucial for the region’s energy transition, highlighting opportunities in distributed energy resources, grid flexibility, and clean energy imports. It emphasises the need for coordinated action to overcome fragmentation, permitting barriers, and limited grid readiness that currently hinder renewable energy expansion.
The report outlines urgent priorities for Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, and the Philippines, focusing on sectors such as Nature, Agriculture & Food, Energy Transition, and Industrial Decarbonisation. It suggests that a full green transition could unlock $120b and create approximately 900,000 jobs by 2030. Adam A. Lyle, Executive Chairman of Padang & Co, stated, “Southeast Asia’s green economy cannot advance through innovation alone; we must build the systems, partnerships, and regulatory environments that allow solutions to scale.”
Singapore leads the region with 494 green economy startups, accounting for 45% of all mapped startups in the SEA-6. The report highlights Singapore’s need to enhance system flexibility and decarbonise industrial clusters. It also identifies five key innovation areas, including distributed energy resources and clean energy imports.
The report serves as a practical guide for corporates, governments, and investors to support the companies building the region’s green economy. Derrick Chiang, CEO of Padang & Co, noted, “The strongest opportunities emerge when corporations, governments, and entrepreneurs work side by side.” As Southeast Asia faces rising climate risks, the report provides a roadmap for enabling cross-sector collaboration and supporting climate-tech solutions.