Asia’s sustainability challenge is not defined by a lack of ideas but by a failure of coordination and implementation. Despite abundant research, policy frameworks, and international dialogue, the region continues to struggle with fragmented governance, dependence on fossil fuels, and weak institutional alignment. These concerns were at the heart of discussions at the Sustainable Development Policy Institute’s (SDPI) regional forum this week, where experts from across Asia highlighted that the continent’s energy and climate transition is faltering not because of limited ambition but because of poor execution and disjointed governance structures.
Dr Talha Yalta of TOBB University in Türkiye described Asia’s environmental crisis as one rooted in coordination rather than concepts, a sentiment echoed by several speakers at the event. Across South and Southeast Asia, energy, trade, and climate policies operate in parallel, seldom intersecting to form cohesive strategies. This separation often results in contradictory actions, where some states continue to expand coal capacity while simultaneously pledging green transitions. The region’s dependency on fossil fuels, coupled with politically entrenched energy subsidies, continues to drain public finances and discourage investment in cleaner technologies. For countries such as Pakistan, limited fiscal capacity and weak data systems make it difficult to design structured pathways for energy diversification and emission reduction. Experts agreed that Asia’s sustainability struggle is not a matter of missing policies but a lack of binding regional frameworks with measurable goals and shared accountability.
During the event, speakers cited the Türkiye-Pakistan collaboration as a successful example of how shared economic and technological goals can lead to meaningful progress. Joint ventures in renewable energy, digital trade, and infrastructure show how integration across borders enhances efficiency and accelerates development. However, participants pointed out that such bilateral partnerships need to evolve into broader multilateral mechanisms that allow countries to share data, pool financing, and manage risk collectively. Currently, Asia’s sustainability efforts remain fragmented, with countries pursuing independent agendas that fail to complement one another. The experts stressed that regional coordination could enable economies of scale and streamline climate adaptation initiatives across borders, ensuring that available technologies such as early-warning systems and resilient infrastructure are implemented effectively.
Dr Paras Kharel from South Asia Watch on Trade, Economics and Environment (SAWTEE) emphasized the importance of regional cooperation for data sharing and disaster management. Without shared systems for climate risk mapping and forecasting, South Asia will continue to face avoidable losses from floods, heatwaves, and rising sea levels. Similarly, SDPI’s Dr Abid Suleri highlighted that financing remains one of the biggest barriers to sustainable development in the region. He explained that private sector investment in green projects depends on predictable governance, transparency, and consistent carbon pricing. Mechanisms like blended finance and concessional lending can attract investment only if backed by credible institutional frameworks. According to him, Asia’s sustainability deficit mirrors its governance deficit, where investors question not the potential of projects but their continuity and enforcement.
Pakistan’s role as the host of this regional dialogue underscores its own critical position in the broader sustainability agenda. With high vulnerability to climate shocks and persistent energy inefficiencies, the country stands to gain the most from a coordinated regional approach that links climate policy with accountability and transparent data systems. Experts reiterated that sustainable development must evolve beyond donor-driven initiatives and become integrated into national and regional planning. The overarching message from the SDPI event was clear: Asia’s progress will depend not on new pledges but on the alignment of institutions, data, and investments. Without coherence and coordination, the region’s sustainability vision risks remaining fragmented and aspirational rather than actionable.
Follow the SPIN IDG WhatsApp Channel for updates across the Smart Pakistan Insights Network covering all of Pakistan’s technology ecosystem.