Accelerating Sustainability and GreenTech in South East Asia
Authored by Darryl Dickens. Format by the Atlas Climate Tech Coalition.

Accelerating Sustainability and GreenTech in South East Asia

Today, Darryl Dickens, our chapter director lead in Singapore for the Climate Tech Coalition, part of 3 of tech's largest acquisitions, and advisor at Atlas Capital shares his stance on investing in SEA climate tech.

Largest wildfire in Canada, largest floods ever in Brazil, longest heatwaves in South East Asia...

...Think Different (1997, Steve Jobs). Build Different (2017, Mark Zuckerberg). 2024: Live Different?

If you are reading this then no doubt, you also have a sense of urgency as we observe and digest what is happening to our climate and planet.???

The inevitable question then becomes “How can we collectively work together to make a difference?”.

To further break this down, we must include Southeast Asia (and its cities) in the solution.??

Why adapt cities?? ?

Source: EDB Singapore, Sustainable Urbanisation: Decarbonising Southeast Asia's Built Environment

Consider these immutable drivers:

  • It is the highest growth region globally for population and city demographics.
  • The demographic bulge is around a very young population (compared to aging regions such as North Asia, Europe, or North America).
  • It adds the equivalent of a New York City every 6 weeks in new urban sprawl.
  • Cities account for 75% of global CO2 emissions (but are only 3% of total land mass).

If we don’t get SE Asia “right” then our global environmental issue can’t be demonstrably solved and improved upon.??

With SE Asia so critical, what models or precedents can we observe and potentially adopt to accelerate sustainability and GreenTech?

We did it with software.

Consider how software (SW) evolved in only the last few decades.? It is now not only the overwhelming majority of capital spend and investment for businesses but also ubiquitous and integral to our personal lives and our consumption of both services and products.

But it was only a couple of decades ago that SW was in monolithic (say ERP) isolated stacks.? It was only specific IT members with deep domain expertise who understood the tech and its usage.??

This looks very similar to today’s GreenTech solutions.? It’s difficult to understand areas such as? “carbon footprint and management”, “waste to fuel”, or “hydrogen power”.? What are the categories around these that are relevant for my business or as an employee?? How and where should I start? ? Am I making the right decisions on the tech and how do I create an overall integrated architecture that makes sense?

Software presents a very compelling example and set of learnings in this regard.

From software to Green Tech

Firstly,? SW and its impact and relevance were continually and simply explained to us.? We were “conditioned” around “what problem it solves”.? From this problem, we then began to understand this new category. ? This is a critical step in adoption because we think in categories.??

A simple example of this is our neighborhood supermarket. ? It is not organized alphabetically (or pictograms etc.).? It is in categories.? And if we were to jump into a time machine, and go back to our supermarket 20 years ago, many of today’s categories (“vegan”; “non-gluten”; “energy drinks”) wouldn’t exist. ? If we take that same time machine to 20 years in the future, we will see many new categories that we never thought of….that we never thought we needed!? This is because we have been conditioned (and explained to) around why the categories (based on a problem) are relevant to us.

Switching back to SW, we see how clear categories evolved.? In fact, an entire industry (tech analysts such as Gartner, Forrester, IDC) formed to tell us what those categories are, and who the respective leaders are in each of them.???

This meant that both IT and business functions could talk about “architecture”.? What key problems are we targeting and how will we architect and combine the categories of SW needed????

This is in an ecosystem where solutions can be integrated and interoperate with each other (and “system integrators” are another whole industry based on this).

A Greentech ecosystem is needed

In North America, there is an ecosystem of companies and VCs redefining the urban space to be more sustainable...

Climate Climate Insider - Built Environment Landscape 2023

In South East Asia, we are clearly not “there” yet with sustainability and GreenTech:

  • The solutions are still very dense to understand for the broad set of internal employees, or external users. ? They are thus not clear “categories” yet.
  • They are largely stand-alone and do not easily integrate into a multi-component ecosystem.
  • From a business or individual standpoint, it is difficult to see why I? would adopt and benefit from this solution.
  • ESG, while at least a broad-based framework, is open to interpretation with a convoluted set of components (such as diversity and inclusion).

For GreenTech start-ups and innovators to flourish and become as ubiquitous as SW they must “condition” and explain to us the core problem being solved and why it is relevant to us.? This is a “point of view” rather than the product and its tech specs.? Within this POV tell us what this new category is.

And a category cannot exist as one company.? There has to be an ecosystem of partners, channels, regulatory agencies, APIs, data flows (the list goes on).

For real change and impact in SE Asia and its urban growth, we must move from isolated products and tech, to clear categories and their surrounding ecosystems.? This is a massive opportunity for GreenTech start-ups and innovators to seize category and market leadership.

Conclusion

The critical context and impact of South East Asia in climate and sustainability around this has never been greater.??

As business leaders, investors, and advisors we must encourage GreenTech start-ups and guide them on how to elevate their category strategy, and the accompanying ecosystem mapping and execution.

It’s about designing the future, and not just following!

Carpe Diem - Let’s go make a difference!

BRAHAM SHNIDER

Startup and Scaleup Focus ? Global Go To Market (GTM) ? International Growth ? B2B Growth Strategy ? Sustainability & Climate ? Advisory Board ? Leadership ?

6 个月

I 100% agree Darryl Dickens with the conclusion "It’s about designing the future, and not just following!" I think one major difference with SW is that the ecosystems that will surround each these new climate and sustainability categories will be "open" to all with a focus on impact, unlike many of the SW ecosystems which are closed and focused around $$

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Thanks for the post! I hope folks find it interesting!

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