Impact Fellowship Program 2026 · KSA & UAE Applications open April 2026 Register Interest →
Imagining Asia Pacific 2050 — Green Box World
Green Box World · Research Intelligence

Imagining Asia Pacific 2050

4.6 billion people. The world’s fastest-growing energy demand. Coal powering 60% of the region’s electricity while its own glaciers, coral reefs and river deltas face irreversible loss. Every indicator below is a decision still open — or already slipping away.

2025 — 2050 Comparison
Indicator
← BAU 2050 2025 Today Transformative 2050 →
The Divergence · 2025–2050

From one present, two very different Asia Pacifics

Hover to see projected values at any point between now and 2050. The widening gap between the two paths is the decision space that still exists today.

Key Indicators — 2025 Baseline
Renewable Capacity
2,200 GW
Led by China — 50% of global total
IRENA 2025
Coal in Electricity Mix
60%
Equivalent of 6,500 coal plants still active
IEA Asia Energy Outlook
Share of Global CO₂
50%
AP region alone — and growing
Global Carbon Project
Coastal Population at Risk
1.2bn
Within 10m of sea level
World Bank / NASA
Extreme Weather Displaced
37M/yr
Typhoons, floods, droughts annually
IDMC 2025
Air Pollution Deaths
3.3M/yr
Mostly coal and traffic emissions
WHO / Lancet
Population 2050
~5.0bn
From 4.6bn today
UN DESA
Food Production Share
60%
Of world’s calories — under heat stress
FAO
Pacific Sea Level Rise
2.5cm
Per decade — existential for SIDS
IPCC AR6 / Pacific Met
Coral Triangle at Risk
60%
Bleaching threat to 600M fish-dependent
IUCN / WWF
Green Jobs (current)
12M
Mostly solar manufacturing — China
IRENA
SE Asia Deforestation
2M ha/yr
Rainforest loss in Indonesia, Myanmar
Global Forest Watch

Energy: The Coal Paradox

China installed more solar in 2024 than the rest of the world combined — yet coal still generates 60% of Asia’s electricity. Energy demand is growing at 3% annually, faster than clean capacity can replace fossil fuels. The region holds 40% of global coal reserves and is home to the world’s largest coal exporters. The transition is real but racing against a growing baseline.

Ocean & Climate: Existential Frontlines

Asia Pacific is the most disaster-prone region on Earth. Pacific Small Island States face submersion — Tuvalu, Kiribati and the Marshall Islands could become uninhabitable by 2050 without radical intervention. Coral reefs, glaciers feeding the Ganges and Mekong, and coastal delta cities from Bangkok to Shanghai face converging pressures that no single country can manage alone.

Equity: The Transition Gap

The clean energy transition is not reaching equitably. China and South Korea advance rapidly; Bangladesh, Cambodia, Laos and Pacific Island nations lack the fiscal space to retire coal or finance adaptation. 1 billion people still rely on polluting cooking fuels. Climate finance flows to creditworthy governments, not the 37 million people displaced by extreme weather every year.

These numbers represent a fork in the road. Explore how three policy pathways shape radically different outcomes across energy, ocean health, food security and climate equity.