From Momentum to Recent Realities - Inside Asia's Transition - Eu-Lin Fang episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 14, 2026 · 49 MIN

From Momentum to Recent Realities - Inside Asia's Transition - Eu-Lin Fang

from This Week in Carbon · host This Week In Carbon

In this episode of This Week in Carbon, Rene Velasquez sits down with Eu-Lin Fang, Sustainability and Climate Change Practice Leader at PwC Singapore. They discuss the surprising momentum of net zero targets set during the COVID pandemic, the real-world challenges companies face in meeting 2030 science-based targets, and how decarbonization must be tackled alongside physical and transition climate risks. Eu-Lin shares practical insights on Scope 3 emissions complexities in Asian supply chains, the power of policy certainty for corporate action, and the role of credible transition plans and regional taxonomies in unlocking sustainable finance. The conversation also covers geopolitical distractions and surging energy prices, the double-edged impact of AI on emissions versus climate solutions, and an optimistic outlook framed by Asia-Pacific’s four Cs: courage, caliber, creation, and connectivity.Takeaways- Many countries showed strong leadership by committing to net zero targets during the height of COVID.- Approximately 145 countries have set net zero targets, covering around 77% of global emissions.- Policy certainty is essential for companies to make confident long-term capital decisions on climate action.- Decarbonization efforts and climate risks must be viewed together, not in isolation.- Scope 3 emissions are critically important but face major data quality, measurement, and double-counting issues.- Business resilience and fiduciary duty matter more than short-term political shifts.- Credible climate transition plans are a key litmus test for financial institutions providing transition finance.- Singapore’s Asia Taxonomy provides a pragmatic regional approach to green and transitioning activities.- AI brings both significant energy demands and powerful opportunities to solve complex climate problems.- Asia-Pacific’s transition can be powered by courage, caliber, creation, and connectivity.With strong buyer interest already shown through ambitious net zero commitments covering 77% of global emissions, this episode sits at the centre of the carbon market’s shift toward credible transition plans, real-world implementation challenges, and pragmatic climate leadership in Asia.Perfect for anyone interested in decarbonization realities, Scope 3 supply chains, sustainable finance, and Asia-Pacific’s path forward. Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and more.

In this episode of This Week in Carbon, Rene Velasquez sits down with Eu-Lin Fang, Sustainability and Climate Change Practice Leader at PwC Singapore. They discuss the surprising momentum of net zero targets set during the COVID pandemic, the real-world challenges companies face in meeting 2030 science-based targets, and how decarbonization must be tackled alongside physical and transition climate risks. Eu-Lin shares practical insights on Scope 3 emissions complexities in Asian supply chains, the power of policy certainty for corporate action, and the role of credible transition plans and regional taxonomies in unlocking sustainable finance. The conversation also covers geopolitical distractions and surging energy prices, the double-edged impact of AI on emissions versus climate solutions, and an optimistic outlook framed by Asia-Pacific’s four Cs: courage, caliber, creation, and connectivity.Takeaways- Many countries showed strong leadership by committing to net zero targets during the height of COVID.- Approximately 145 countries have set net zero targets, covering around 77% of global emissions.- Policy certainty is essential for companies to make confident long-term capital decisions on climate action.- Decarbonization efforts and climate risks must be viewed together, not in isolation.- Scope 3 emissions are critically important but face major data quality, measurement, and double-counting issues.- Business resilience and fiduciary duty matter more than short-term political shifts.- Credible climate transition plans are a key litmus test for financial institutions providing transition finance.- Singapore’s Asia Taxonomy provides a pragmatic regional approach to green and transitioning activities.- AI brings both significant energy demands and powerful opportunities to solve complex climate problems.- Asia-Pacific’s transition can be powered by courage, caliber, creation, and connectivity.With strong buyer interest already shown through ambitious net zero commitments covering 77% of global emissions, this episode sits at the centre of the carbon market’s shift toward credible transition plans, real-world implementation challenges, and pragmatic climate leadership in Asia.Perfect for anyone interested in decarbonization realities, Scope 3 supply chains, sustainable finance, and Asia-Pacific’s path forward. Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and more.

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From Momentum to Recent Realities - Inside Asia's Transition - Eu-Lin Fang

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In this episode of This Week in Carbon, Rene Velasquez sits down with Eu-Lin Fang, Sustainability and Climate Change Practice Leader at PwC Singapore. They discuss the surprising momentum of net zero targets set during the COVID pandemic, the...

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