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Southeast Asia’s digital age requires the right energy mix
Indonesia and Malaysia are at the dawn of breathtaking digital capabilities. Their energy infrastructure must keep up with their ambitions
Outlook 2026: APAC is steadily growing and supporting its biofuels industry
The region’s access to versatile feedstock, combined with policy support, is setting it up to meet growing demand both at home and abroad
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The global race for critical minerals has become a defining feature of energy geopolitics, presenting the ASEAN region with both opportunity and risk
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The US’ domestic energy market may be stagnating, but its role in the global energy system looks set to bloom
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A more pragmatic approach has seen the country reverse its production decline in 2025 but its 1m b/d target still seems out of reach
Alberta’s energy hub sees silver lining
US tariffs bolster Alberta’s Industrial Heartland exports to Asia
Germany under pressure to solve Rosneft refinery problem
The Russian company’s German assets are under Berlin’s management and are exempt from sanctions, for now, but a permanent solution still needs to be found
A third distillate disruption
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India’s Nayara fallout
The EU’s Russia sanctions could have far-reaching implications for India’s Vadinar-based refinery
Downstream Indonesia Malaysia
Jamal Alblooshi
8 January 2026
Follow @PetroleumEcon
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Southeast Asia’s digital age requires the right energy mix

Indonesia and Malaysia are at the dawn of breathtaking digital capabilities. Their energy infrastructure must keep up with their ambitions

Indonesia and Malaysia are powering Asian economic development. The former grew by 5% in the first nine months of 2025 and is projected to retain that growth through to 2027, according to the World Bank. The latter is projected to see similar growth levels, with real GDP growing by more than 5% in 2024, according to the OECD. Much of that growth is being accelerated by efforts to drive the digital economy. Malaysia is now Southeast Asia’s fastest growing digital economy, growing at 15% year-on-year.  Indonesia is on track to have the region’s largest digital economy, exceeding $130b in 2025, according to the International Trade Administration. The IEA predicts electricity demand from d

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