24/7 carbon-free electricity (24/7 CFE) is now about cost, risk, and efficiency. TransitionZero’s Abhishek Shivakumar explains how granular procurement reduces system costs and makes clean power more bankable.
Electricity demand is rising rapidly across Asia, bringing greater focus on how clean power can be supplied at scale. TransitionZero, an energy transition planning data and software provider, examined the economics of 24/7 CFE across five key Asia-Pacific markets.
The modelling demonstrates that partial 24/7 CFE targets outperform annual matching on a cost basis in all markets.
Capital is already flowing to support higher levels of CFE. For example, globally, annual energy storage deployment is set to be 23% higher than in 2024, hitting an all-time high at 92 GW. The ever-stronger business case for dispatchable clean power enables corporates to begin the transition toward 24/7 CFE, with 100% hourly matching serving as the North Star of corporate energy procurement.
Building towards 100% CFE over time rather than committing upfront improves bankability, allowing companies to adapt portfolios over time as costs fall and new technologies mature. TransitionZero’s model identified no-regret CFE targets for policymakers, where both the participating consumers and the wider electricity system benefit relative to annual matching. These findings reflect a demand signal that is already present in the market, as large corporates seek more effective and credible procurement strategies in business-led initiatives such as the United Nations’ 24/7 CFE Compact, Climate Group’s 24/7 CFE Coalition and Eurelectric’s Next-Level CFE Hub.
24/7 CFE is particularly relevant for commercial and industrial consumers driving electrification, such as heavy industry and data centres, where electricity demand is flat around-the-clock and energy costs are material to competitiveness. For these consumers, hourly matching offers not just a decarbonisation solution, but an economic strategy for hedging and long-term planning.