EDITORIAL: Asia’s sustainability challenge has never been about the absence of ideas. The region is rich with research, conferences, and policy frameworks. What continues to hold it back is poor coordination, fossil fuel dependence, and fragmented governance.
Experts at the Sustainable Development Policy Institute’s event this week put it plainly: the continent’s climate transition is faltering not for want of ambition, but for lack of execution.
Dr Talha Yalta of TOBB University in Türkiye very rightly described Asia’s crisis as one of coordination, not concepts. The description fits. Across South and Southeast Asia, energy and climate policies move in parallel silos, rarely intersecting with trade, data, or industrial planning. Fragmented governance means countries work at cross-purposes, while weak enforcement allows pollution and fossil dependence to persist. The region’s economies remain locked into carbon-intensive growth patterns, even as climate shocks grow deadlier each year.
Fossil fuel subsidies remain politically entrenched because they are seen as quick fixes to energy affordability. Yet they trap countries in the very cycle of dependence that drains public finances and deters investment in cleaner alternatives. Asia’s largest emitters, from India to Indonesia, continue to expand coal capacity even as they promise green transitions. Smaller economies, including Pakistan, lack the fiscal space and data systems to plan coordinated exits from fossil dependence. The problem is not a lack of policy documents – it is the absence of credible regional frameworks that bind governments to measurable timelines and shared reporting.
Speakers at the conference cited Türkiye-Pakistan collaboration as an example of how coordination can work when it is based on mutual interest. Joint ventures in energy, digital trade, and transport corridors show that integration creates efficiency. Such models need to extend beyond bilateral partnerships to multilateral mechanisms where data, financing, and risk management are collectively managed. At present, Asia’s sustainability map remains a patchwork of national efforts without regional coherence.
Climate adaptation offers a similar lesson. Rising sea levels, deadly heat waves, and floods are already testing urban and agricultural resilience. The tools to respond exist – data-driven risk mapping, early-warning systems, and resilient infrastructure – but require shared platforms and standardised data. Dr Paras Kharel of South Asia Watch on Trade, Economics and Environment (SAWTEE) warned that without regional collaboration on early-warning systems, South Asia will continue to suffer avoidable losses of lives and livelihoods. Technology can only work if information flows freely across borders and institutions.
Financing the transition is another test of coordination. As SDPI’s Dr Abid Suleri noted, private investment will not flow into green projects unless governments create stable rules, transparent pipelines, and credible carbon pricing. Blended finance, guarantees, and concessional lending can de-risk green investment, but only if accompanied by predictable governance. Asia’s sustainability deficit is therefore a governance deficit. Investors do not doubt the potential – they doubt continuity.
Pakistan’s hosting of this regional forum underlines its own crossroads. The country remains among the most climate-vulnerable in Asia, with chronic energy inefficiency and weak data transparency. It has every reason to lead the call for a coordinated regional framework that links policy with accountability. Sustainable development cannot remain a donor-driven agenda; it must become a structural one, rooted in national planning and regional collaboration.
The message from experts is clear. Asia does not lack innovation or intent. What it lacks is coherence. Progress will depend less on new pledges and more on how well countries align their institutions, data, and investments. Until coordination replaces fragmentation, and accountability replaces rhetoric, the region’s sustainability drive will remain more aspiration than achievement.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2025