Singapore's Power Ambitions Put Sarawak's Green Energy Vision in the Frame
Singapore's stated intent to import electricity from Malaysia puts a fresh spotlight on Sarawak's long-gestating ambitions to position itself as a clean-energy exporter for the wider region.

When Singapore's energy authorities signalled openness to importing electricity from Malaysia in late 2025, the announcement drew quiet satisfaction in Kuching. Sarawak, the resource-rich eastern state of Malaysian Borneo, had spent years cultivating exactly this kind of demand. The city takes its name from the Malay word for cat — a quirk of colonial-era geography that says little about the scale of what its ruling clique now hopes to achieve.
The arithmetic is straightforward enough. Singapore has among the world's smallest land areas and a power grid that runs largely on imported natural gas. Its decarbonisation pledges require alternatives it cannot easily generate at home. Sarawak, by contrast, sits atop a network of rivers draining from the Borneo highlands that have powered its own grids for decades. State-linked utilities have been quietly building out the transmission and interconnection infrastructure needed to serve buyers beyond Sarawak's own borders. The Singapore signal gave that buildout a customer.
A decade in the making
Sarawak's ambition to become a regional electricity broker is not new. The state's Premier, who also holds the finance portfolio, has spoken publicly about positioning Sarawak as what officials call a "green-economy hub" for Southeast Asia. The concept involves exporting hydroelectric power, developing pumped-storage facilities as a form of grid-scale battery, and ultimately selling capacity to Singapore, Brunei, and the Indonesian provinces of Kalimantan and West Kalimantan that share the island.
Those are ambitions that have moved slowly. Interconnection agreements require bilateral sign-offs from Kuala Lumpur, coordination with Singapore's Energy Market Authority, and resolution of pricing regimes that neither government has historically prioritised. The sources do not specify whether a binding power-purchase agreement has yet been signed. What has changed is Singapore's posture — an openness to imports that removes one of the main obstacles Sarawak's planners have cited for years.
The industrial logic
For Sarawak, the economic calculus is compelling. The state has a young and growing population but limited industrial depth; its GDP per capita lags the Malaysian peninsular average. Energy exports offer hard currency earnings and justify further investment in generation capacity that would otherwise serve only a relatively small domestic market. Sarawak Energy Berhad, the state-linked utility, has been expanding its hydroelectric footprint continuously since the early 2000s, with particular emphasis on the Baleh and Baram river basins.
The venture capital community has noticed. Private infrastructure funds have taken stakes in some of the associated transmission joint ventures, attracted by long-term off-take contracts and the relative political stability that a state-backed counterparty provides. Whether those financial arrangements survive the inevitable renegotiations that characterise cross-border power deals in this region remains an open question.
Competing visions of the regional grid
Singapore's electricity-import framework does not specify Malaysia as the exclusive source. The Philippines has expressed interest in ASEAN-wide power sharing. Indonesia has its own inter-island interconnection projects underway. Australia has floated the idea of exporting solar power via a hypothetical subsea cable — a scheme that has attracted both venture enthusiasm and engineering scepticism in roughly equal measure. In that competitive landscape, Sarawak's advantage is proximity and an existing hydroelectric base that can deliver dispatchable power rather than the intermittency that solar and wind introduce to a grid operator's planning.
The counter-argument, frequently raised in Jakarta and Manila, is that electricity exports create dependency. A buyer that plugs into a neighbour's grid becomes vulnerable to price shocks, political friction, or supply interruptions — a concern that resonates in Southeast Asia's geopolitical memory. Sarawak's officials argue that diversification works both ways: multiple buyers reduce the leverage any single off-taker holds. The evidence for that proposition remains to be written.
Stakes
If the Singapore-Sarawak linkage proceeds on commercially viable terms, it would mark the first high-profile cross-border electricity sale of this type in the region. Neighbouring states would face pressure to accelerate their own interconnection projects or watch investment flow to Malaysian Borneo instead. The structural consequence would be a slow reshaping of ASEAN energy architecture in ways that favour states with geography that permits large-scale hydroelectric development — which, on Borneo, means Sarawak and the Indonesian provinces.
The risk is timing. Major infrastructure projects of this kind typically operate on decade-long horizons. Singapore's current government has set targets for the 2030s; a change in political leadership or energy priorities in either jurisdiction could stall what has so far been only a declared intent to explore bilateral talks. Sarawak's planners know this. Their next move will be to try to lock in framework agreements before the political window shifts.
Sarawak's Premier has spoken publicly about positioning the state as a "green-economy hub"; Singapore's Energy Market Authority signalled openness to imports in late 2025.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/nikkeiasia
- https://t.me/nikkeiasia