After a seasonal dip in quarter one of financial year 2025 (1QFY25), electricity sales in Peninsular Malaysia rebounded sharply in 2QFY25, led by commercial demand from data centres. Load utilisation rose to 603MW in Jun 2025 from 485MW in Mar 2025, with total energy use of 1,852GWh in the first half of financial year 2025 (1HFY25).
As of Jun 2025, 24 data centre projects (with 3,500MW capacity) have been completed, including three data centre projects (with 740MW capacity) in 2QFY25, according to Kenanga. Year-to-date (YTD), five new Electricity Supply Agreements (ESA) were signed, adding 480MW, with two projects (with 253MW) completed in Jul – Aug 2025.
In total, 47 ESA have been signed, with cumulative capacity of 6,700MW. Demand from this segment is expected to grow further. To meet rising demand growth from data centre development, Malaysia is expected to add 6GW–8GW of new generation capacity by 2030. The Energy Commission has invited RFPs for:
(i) new
generation capacity.
(ii)
extensions of gas-fired PPAs.
(iii) additional capacity from expired PPAs from gas-fired plants.
With no new coal-fired plants, gas-fired capacity is the priority to support rising demand. In fact, natural gas usage in Peninsular Malaysia is already driven largely by the power sector. Gas-fired generation is expected to climb toward 50% by 2030, supported by:
(i) data
centre-driven electricity demand.
(ii)
phase-out of coal plants.
(iii) 6GW–8GW new gas capacity by 2030.
Reference:
Electricity demand surges
in quarter two alongside growing demand for data centre,
CS Ming, Focus Malaysia, 8 October 2025

No comments:
Post a Comment