Three southeast Asian national utilities have settled terms to send 100MW of renewable energy generated in Laos to Singapore, the firms announced on 14 January, resuming cross-border power trade that ended in 2024.
Power from Laos will be transmitted through existing interconnections in Thailand and Malaysia before reaching Singapore, under a two-year agreement between Malaysia's Tenaga Nasional Berhad, Laos' Electricite Du Laos and Thailand's Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand signed on 14 January and effective as of the same day.
A similar scheme titled LTMS-PIP existed in 2022-24, and about 280GWh of hydropower was transacted as of late 2023. The new scheme LTMS-PIP 2.0 had been under discussion but was not fully implemented until now.
Total capacity traded under LTMS-PIP 2.0 will be up to 200MW, with 100MW of additional supply from Malaysia announced in 2024.
Malaysia also has a separate scheme, Enegem, for selling renewable power to Singapore. The first 50MW deal was signed in 2024. A second auction round of undisclosed capacity opened late last year, and the results have not been announced.

