Highlights
- BII's CEO makes first visit to South-East Asia since taking the helm a year ago.
- Reaffirms progress toward delivering £500 million in climate finance by 2026.
- Investments will deliver an estimated 1.8+ GW of clean energy and avoid over 1.6 million tonnes of CO2 emissions.
British International Investment (BII), the UK's development finance institution (DFI) announced it has committed £308 million in climate finance across South-East Asia during its current strategy period, advancing its ambition to invest up to £500 million by 2026.
BII's investments are expected to deliver over 1.8 GW of clean energy capacity and avoid more than 1.6 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions, supporting the region's green transition.
South-East Asia is among one of the most climate-vulnerable regions globally, facing rising sea levels, extreme weather events, and significant threats to food and water security. The region is also heavily dependent on fossil fuels, with coal and natural gas still dominating its energy mix. To address these challenges, governments across the region have set ambitious decarbonisation targets including net-zero commitments by 2050, reflecting a strong policy push toward clean energy.
However, the region needs an estimated US$210 billion annually for green infrastructure to meet its climate goals. This is a gap that cannot be filled by public funding alone. As a committed partner to the region, BII is stepping in not only with capital but with a patient and flexible approach to de-risk projects, demonstrate their commercial viability, and encourage market participation.

Pictured left to right: Srini Nagarajan - Managing Director and Head of Asia, Leslie Maasdorp - CEO, Holger Rothenbusch - Managing Director, Head of Infrastructure and Climate
Leslie Maasdorp, BII CEO on his first visit to the region since joining the organisation said: "Our commitment in South-East Asia reflects our ambition to deliver climate finance where it matters most, supporting countries that are highly vulnerable to climate change and driving the transition to clean energy.
"By taking a patient and flexible approach to de-risk projects and demonstrate their viability, we're helping accelerate the development of bankable projects that are essential for this transition. These investments not only reduce emissions but also create jobs, build resilience, and unlock private capital for sustainable growth.
BII is investing across the full capital spectrum in South-East Asia including through funds, equity, debt, and innovative platforms. Its first investment on re-entering the region was in the SUSI Asia Energy Transition
Fund (SAETF), which supports infrastructure projects across renewable energy, energy efficiency, and energy storage, and has already built a pipeline of over 800 MW of solar and wind projects.
The DFI is also building platforms like Sustainable Asia Renewable Assets (SARA), a co-investment initiative with FMO and SUSI, designed to develop a 500 MW portfolio of greenfield renewable projects. SARA's recent acquisition of a 39.4 MW wind project in Vietnam is expected to generate 110.9 GWh of clean energy annually and avoid more than 55,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions.
In equity, BII's investment in Xurya is pioneering rooftop solar in Indonesia, targeting 600 MW by 2028 and creating over 6,000 green jobs. On the debt side, its first direct investment in Vietnam through VPBank will enable financing for climate-related projects and SMEs, further unlocking capital for sustainable growth.
Also, under the joint Development and Construction Facility established by BII and Pentagreen Capital, $80m has been committed to ib vogt to finance solar, hybrid solar, and battery storage projects in the Philippines, Indonesia, and other eligible geographies in South-East Asia. The 99 MWp Tantangan Solar Power Plant is the first project to benefit from this facility. Once completed in 2026, it is expected to generate over 150 GWh of clean electricity annually, enough to power more than 82,000 households, while offsetting over 66,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions every year.





