Business
Asia’s Clean Energy Boom Reshapes the Global Power Sector and Unlocks a $15 Billion Market
Asia is rewriting the rules of the global energy system. The region’s record-breaking expansion of solar power has now pushed clean electricity generation past its own demand growth, triggering what analysts describe as the sharpest annual decline in fossil-fuel electricity production this century.
Key takeaways
- Asia’s record solar expansion has driven the biggest annual fall in fossil-fuel electricity generation this century, with China and India both recording declines in fossil power for the first time.
- Asia’s green technology and sustainability market is on track to more than double from $6.4 billion in 2024 to nearly $15 billion by 2032, growing at 11.3% annually.
- IoT and green buildings are leading the technology shift, backed by sweeping government policies like China’s 14th Five-Year Plan and India’s rapid build-out of renewable energy capacity.
Simultaneously, the continent is becoming the epicentre of a fast-growing green technology market projected to nearly double in value by 2032.
Together, the two trends are pointing toward a structural, not merely cyclical, shift in how the world’s most populous region powers its economies.
A Historic Turn in the Power Sector
According to reporting by Nikkei Asia, Asia’s record increase in solar power generation last year helped clean power surpass the region’s electricity demand growth, resulting in the largest annual decline in fossil-fuel generation this century.
The scale of that achievement is difficult to overstate. Asia accounts for the bulk of the world’s coal consumption and, until recently, remained the principal driver of rising global emissions. That the region is now leading the retreat from fossil fuels, outpacing Europe and North America, marks a dramatic reversal.
The shift is being driven by a handful of large economies acting in concert. China and India, historically the largest contributors to the global rise in fossil power, both recorded a fall in fossil generation in 2025. In both countries, record clean power additions outpaced demand growth. This brought net growth in global fossil generation to a halt, a milestone that appeared distant only a few years ago.
Solar power has been the decisive technology. Solar power cemented its role as the dominant driver of change in the global power sector, with its record growth meeting three-quarters of the net rise in electricity demand in 2025.
The momentum extends well beyond China and India. Asia started its electricity transition later than other regions, but is catching up fast. The share of solar and wind energy in Asia is now almost equal to the world average, and the share of renewables in Asia’s electricity mix reached 29% in 2024.
A Green Tech Market Racing to Keep Pace
The power sector transition is not happening in isolation. It is being accompanied by a broader surge in demand for green technology and sustainability solutions across industry, urban infrastructure, and agriculture.
According to market research firm P&S Intelligence, the Asian green technology and sustainability market was $6,415.9 million in 2024 and will reach $14,944.7 million by 2032, growing at 11.3% during 2025 to 2032. That trajectory would see the market more than double in under a decade.
The forces driving this expansion are partly environmental, partly economic, and partly regulatory. Asia’s position as a major carbon emitter has intensified the demand for green technology solutions. Over the past few years, Asia, particularly China, has emitted carbon at an alarming rate, driven by rapid economic growth and energy consumption. Among all the sources, coal accounted for approximately 15.4 billion metric tonnes of emissions in 2023. That environmental pressure has catalysed consumer demand for eco-friendly products and given decisive impetus to companies offering green solutions across the region.
Government policy is adding structural momentum. China’s 14th Five-Year Plan (2021 to 2025) aims to reduce emission intensity by 18% and sets a reduction target of 13.5% for energy intensity over a period of five years. Similar initiatives across Asia are demonstrating strong governmental commitment to sustainability.
India, meanwhile, is building out its renewable infrastructure at a striking pace. India’s installed renewable energy capacity reached 201.45 GW in October 2024, making up 46.3% of the country’s total installed power generation capacity.
Technology Is at the Core
The green technology market is not simply about solar panels and wind turbines. Increasingly, it encompasses a sophisticated ecosystem of digital tools, including IoT sensors, artificial intelligence, cloud computing platforms, and carbon monitoring software, that together are enabling industries to reduce their environmental footprints in real time.
IoT technology accounted for the largest revenue share in 2023, at 42.6%, and is anticipated to continue leading the market. Cloud infrastructure is also gaining ground rapidly, with adoption rising due to its ability to optimise energy resources and integrate seamlessly with IoT devices across geographies.
The green buildings category held the largest market share in 2024, due to the rising commercialisation and industrialisation in Asia, which has increased building construction to meet business and residential needs. Green buildings, which use recyclable materials and energy-efficient systems, including solar panels, have become the primary application segment for these technologies.
The Road Ahead
The convergence of record-breaking clean power generation and a rapidly expanding green technology market suggests Asia’s energy transition has moved beyond the demonstration phase into one of industrial-scale deployment.
The future of the global power system is being shaped in Asia, with China and India at the heart of the energy transition.
Yet the region’s scale means that challenges remain formidable. Electricity demand across Asia is rising sharply, driven by data centres, electric vehicles, and the electrification of heating and industry. Sustaining a clean-power surplus above that demand growth will require continued investment and continued political will.
For now, the data tells a story that would have seemed improbable at the start of this decade: Asia, long regarded as the world’s most stubborn fossil-fuel dependency, is leading the planet’s most consequential energy transition.
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