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Net Zero Is Losing Steam.
Here's Why Transition Finance in Asia Is Just Getting Started..

Date

27/05/2026

Category

General

In a frank conversation on Money FM 89.3’s Under the Radar, Evercomm co-founder and CEO Ted Chen explains why transition finance in Asia demands engineering precision — not ESG ambition.

The phrase “net zero” has been losing altitude. Even in Europe, where sustainability has long been front-facing, major banks are withdrawing their net zero commitments. Geopolitical pressures, energy security concerns, and rising pragmatism have shifted the conversation.
 
Yet Ted Chen, co-founder and CEO at Evercomm Singapore, isn’t rattled. Speaking to Money FM 89.3’s Chua Tian Tian on the *Under the Radar* podcast, he made a point that cuts through the noise: transition finance in Asia is not dying with the net zero narrative. If anything, it is maturing.
 
“Energy security, water security, food, waste — all these continue to remain very important critical infrastructure for every country,” Ted told Chua Tian Tian. “We really focus more on these pieces than ESG in general.”
 
This is not a retreat. It is a recalibration — and it reflects a more honest, more durable version of what the decarbonisation journey in Asia actually looks like.
 

What Evercomm Does — And Why It Matters for Transition Finance

 
Founded in 2013 and headquartered in Singapore, Evercomm sits at the intersection of industrial engineering and financial services. That’s not a common position to hold, and Ted acknowledged it takes deliberate framing to explain.
 
The company’s core technology was developed through a 6-7 year research collaboration with Nanyang Technological University (NTU), and was already being piloted at Jurong Port and the Punggol Digital District before reaching commercial scale. That heritage matters. It means Evercomm’s solutions were tested in the real complexity of industrial operations — not built in a lab and retrofitted.
 
What this translates to in practice is a product suite focused on two interconnected problems:
 
1. Compliance reporting — helping companies and banks produce verified, ISO-aligned emissions reports that hold up under scrutiny from regulators, credit committees, and auditors
 
2. Simulation and planning — helping enterprises and financial institutions model decarbonisation pathways and identify which projects are both green *and* economically viable
 
The second piece is where transition finance enters the picture. “The project still needs to make economic sense,” Ted said plainly. “If the project is purely green and doesn’t really make economic sense, there’s nothing that we can do to push the financing.”
 
For transition finance in Asia to work at scale, this is the honest constraint that practitioners must start from — not the aspirational target.
 

Why Banks Are the Real Gateway to Transition Finance in Asia

 
One of the clearest insights from Ted’s conversation with Chua Tian Tian was a shift in how Evercomm thinks about its go-to-market strategy. The company serves two distinct customer segments: industrial enterprises such as Thai Airways and Mitsubishi, and financial institutions including banks, family offices, and funds. But Ted made clear that the financial sector now anchors the entire approach.
 
“When we go to an industrial customer, it’s much easier to go to them through an introduction from the banks than to directly approach,” he said.
 
This logic reshapes what transition finance in Asia actually requires. Banks are not passive funders waiting for a green project to appear. They are the channel through which capital flows to the industrial sector. If those banks lack the tools to assess the decarbonisation impact of a loan, transition finance stalls at the source.
 
Evercomm’s response is its NXPlan and NXMap products — the planning and emissions mapping tools that allow banks and their industrial clients to model scenarios, quantify impact, and build a bankable case for sustainable investment. NXPlan handles transition scenario simulation. NXMap visualises emissions across assets and geographies. Together, they give banks the precision data that credit committees need before approving a transition finance transaction.
 
Customers like Mitsubishi Electric and Thai Airways represent the industrial side of the equation. CTBC Bank, one of Evercomm’s earliest and most significant partners, represents the financial gateway that makes transition finance flow from intention into action.
 

PathMatch: The AI Engine at the Heart of Transition Finance

 
In November 2025, Evercomm and CTBC Bank unveiled PathMatch — a jointly developed AI-powered transition finance engine. The product targets a precise problem: how do banks assess the decarbonisation impact of a loan, manage Scope 3 financed emissions, and track portfolio transition performance in real time?
 
For CTBC Bank, the context is significant. The bank chairs the Asia-Pacific arm of key financial institution compliance standards, making it both an influential early adopter and a credibility signal for other institutions watching how transition finance frameworks develop in the region.
 
PathMatch is built to answer the questions that credit committees are beginning to ask — and will increasingly be required to answer.
 
  • Can this project demonstrate a measurable decarbonisation pathway?
  • Is the emissions data verifiable to ISO standards?
  • How does this loan affect the bank’s financed emissions portfolio under PCAF (Partnership for Carbon Accounting Financials)?
These are not theoretical questions. Regulatory requirements around climate risk, capital transition, and Scope 3 financed emissions are tightening across Asia-Pacific, driven by frameworks including IFRS S2, CSRD, TCFD, and MAS guidelines. Transition finance practitioners need tools that produce bankable outputs — not just sustainability reports that sit in a drawer.
 
Ted confirmed that PathMatch marks the start of a broader regional roll-out. Speaking with Chua Tian Tian, he signalled that local Singapore banks are now in active discussions. “We started with CTBC being a Taiwan bank,” he said. “Now coming to Singapore, we already started to talk to local banks — and hopefully by June, we will make some announcement.”
Transition Finance Infographic

Southeast Asia: The Industrial Hub Moving Faster Than You Think

 
When asked about geographies, Ted’s answer on Thailand was the most revealing. Despite being a newer market for Evercomm, Thailand has emerged as the most important Southeast Asia geography — not because of multinational demand, but because of domestic regulatory pressure.
 
“The Thailand regulations are pushing — at least from the ground that we feel — more aggressively than some of our neighbouring countries,” Ted said. “Their customers are facing compliance pressure a lot harder.”
 
This is an important signal for anyone tracking transition finance in Asia. Regulatory pressure is not uniform across the region, and it does not always originate from the markets that attract the most attention. Thailand, as an industrial hub with active compliance momentum, is demonstrating that the enabling conditions for serious transition finance can develop quickly in markets that are often underestimated.
 
Taiwan remains critical for a different set of reasons. It functions as both an engineering hub — given the concentration of hardware capability there — and a key banking partner market, given CTBC Bank’s influence. Evercomm recently established an investment fund arm in Taiwan, with matching support from the Taiwan Ministry of Environment. The fund targets €30 million in deployments over five to six years, focused on bringing proven European decarbonisation technologies into Asia at manufacturing costs that make them viable for regional industrial customers.
 
Singapore, Evercomm’s headquarters, plays a coordination and integration role — a commercial and regulatory anchor from which the regional strategy is orchestrated.

 

Europe: Where the Technology for Transition Finance Originates

 
Ted’s Europe strategy deserves careful attention. Evercomm is targeting European financial hubs — Luxembourg and Switzerland — as priority markets for the transition finance platform, given their concentration of institutional capital and proximity to advanced solutions for hard-to-abate sectors.
 
But Europe also functions as a technology source. Many of the most advanced decarbonisation solutions that Asia’s industrial sector needs — particularly for sectors like chemicals, logistics, and heavy manufacturing — were developed in Europe. The cost barrier is manufacturing. Technologies proven in European conditions carry a price premium tied to European production costs, making them difficult to deploy at scale for Asian customers.
 
Evercomm’s approach is to identify proven European technologies, partner with them, and facilitate their establishment in Taiwan’s manufacturing base — reducing production costs while preserving the technical integrity that makes them credible for transition finance transactions. This is not arbitrage. It is a deliberate strategy to close the technology access gap that has historically slowed the deployment of transition finance in Asia.
 
The matching investment from the Taiwan Ministry of Environment validates this approach. Government co-investment signals that the technology sourcing and localisation strategy is seen as strategically important — not just commercially interesting.
 

What This Means for Transition Finance Practitioners

 
Several things emerge from Ted’s conversation with Chua Tian Tian that are worth holding onto.
 
Economic viability is the first filter, not the last. Transition finance in Asia will not scale on ambition alone. Every project still needs to make a business case. The role of platforms like NXPlan is to surface which projects make that case — and help structure the financing around them.
 
Banks are the multiplier. A bank relationship provides a credible channel to industrial customers that direct sales cannot replicate. Building the tools that help banks assess climate transition risk and financed emissions is building the infrastructure for an entire sector.
 
Compliance is the entry point, not the destination. Companies invest in emissions reporting because regulations require it. But once that data is clean and verified — aligned to ISO 14064, verified by Bureau Veritas, and structured to PCAF standards — it becomes the foundation for simulation, scenario planning, and bankable transition finance transactions.
 
Regional heterogeneity is real. Thailand, Taiwan, Singapore, and Malaysia are not interchangeable markets. Each has its own regulatory pace, industrial composition, and banking readiness. Transition finance strategies that treat Southeast Asia as a single block will miss where the real momentum is building — and where it is stalling.

 

The Infrastructure Quietly Being Built

 
Ted Chen did not come to Money FM 89.3 to celebrate ESG. He came to describe a more grounded, more durable version of what decarbonisation finance actually looks like in Asia — one where economic logic, engineering precision, and regulatory compliance work together rather than pulling against each other.
 
Transition finance in Asia is not waiting for the net zero narrative to revive. It is finding its footing in energy security, industrial compliance, and the straightforward logic that banks need to know what they are financing.
That is the market Evercomm is building for. 
 
Listen to the full interview on Money FM 89.3’s Under the Radar podcast, hosted by Chua Tian Tian.
 
Ready to explore what transition finance looks like for your organisation? Discover how NXPlan and NXMap can support your decarbonisation journey.

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