Global energy systems are facing sustained disruption, driven by geopolitical tensions, supply chain instability, and increasingly volatile fuel markets. These pressures have pushed energy security back to the top of the global agenda, reshaping how countries assess risk, plan infrastructure, and prioritise investment.
Availability and access to energy, coupled with rising price volatility, are structurally changing how governments and businesses operate. Across industries, organisations are reassessing operational costs and actively seeking ways to reduce consumption. This shift is already visible in procurement decisions, capital allocation, and policy direction, where energy is increasingly treated as a strategic variable that directly impacts competitiveness.
From sustainability to business strategy:
The Middle East faces a distinct set of dynamics. As a central pillar of the global energy system, supplying a significant share of the world’s oil and a substantial portion of natural gas, the region is also experiencing rapid growth in domestic energy demand. Expanding cities, industrial development, transport electrification, and digital infrastructure such as data centres are all contributing to this trend.
At the same time, governments across the Gulf have placed energy efficiency at the centre of national transformation agendas. In Saudi Arabia, Vision 2030 highlights the importance of improving energy productivity across key sectors. In the United Arab Emirates, long-term strategies such as the UAE Energy Strategy 2050 and Net Zero 2050 initiative emphasise efficiency as a key pillar of sustainable growth.
Against this backdrop, energy efficiency is evolving from a sustainability narrative into an economic imperative. A key opportunity lies in reducing exposure to energy price volatility, improving system performance, and lowering lifecycle costs. These are efficiency measures that deliver measurable and immediate value.
In an increasingly cost-sensitive and uncertain environment, energy efficiency also enhances competitiveness by enabling greater operational predictability. For many organisations, the case is already well established. Investments in efficiency are delivering tangible financial returns alongside long-term environmental benefits.
The built environment as a critical lever:
The built environment represents one of the most immediate opportunities to improve energy performance at scale. While building design, materials, and urban planning all influence overall efficiency, the operational phase remains the dominant driver of energy consumption.
Within this, cooling and ventilation systems account for a significant share of demand in the Gulf’s climate. According to the International Energy Agency, cooling and desalination are expected to account for close to 40 percent of projected growth in electricity demand in the MENA region by 2035, several times the global average.
As cities continue to expand, the efficiency of HVAC systems will play a defining role in shaping overall energy use. Strengthening performance requirements for these systems, and aligning them with robust, internationally
recognised efficiency frameworks, represents one of the most immediate and scalable pathways to reduce consumption while maintaining indoor comfort, air quality, and operational reliability.
In this context, regulatory approaches that move beyond basic compliance and actively drive higher efficiency performance can play an important role. The European Union’s Ecodesign framework provides one example of how minimum performance standards can be structured to progressively improve product efficiency across the market, while maintaining a level playing field for manufacturers and clarity for specifiers. Such approaches also support greater market transparency and fair competition by ensuring that performance claims are comparable, verifiable, and consistently enforced.
The role of trusted manufacturing and standards:
Achieving meaningful efficiency gains depends not only on system design, but on the quality and reliability of the equipment being deployed. In the built environment, where systems are expected to perform consistently over long lifecycles, verified performance becomes critical.
This is particularly relevant in the Middle East, where HVAC systems must operate under extreme ambient conditions, including high temperatures, humidity, dust, and extended operating hours. These factors place additional stress on equipment and make consistent, verifiable performance essential to ensure systems deliver as intended over time.
In a market where performance claims can vary, objective and transparent benchmarks are essential. Third-party certifications and recognised standards provide assurance that products will operate as specified, enabling consultants, developers, and policymakers to make informed decisions with confidence.
Frameworks such as Eurovent and AMCA certification programmes play an important role in this process, offering independently verified performance data. However, it is important to distinguish between verified performance and high efficiency. Certification ensures accuracy of claims, but it does not in itself guarantee optimal energy performance.
To identify truly energy-efficient solutions, stakeholders should look beyond compliance and consider performance indicators such as Eurovent’s energy labelling or AMCA’s Fan Energy Index. These tools help reduce the risk of underperformance, support regulatory alignment, and enable more effective long-term investment decisions.
A strategic pathway forward
In the face of ongoing global energy uncertainty, energy efficiency stands out as one of the most immediate and cost-effective opportunities available today. It strengthens resilience, supports economic growth, and reduces long-term exposure to risk, while also contributing to broader sustainability objectives.
For the Gulf, this means building a more secure, stable, and competitive energy future, one where growth is no longer driven by increasing consumption, but by how effectively energy is used as a strategic resource.
The author, Morten Schmelzer, Technical Marketing Director and Global Head of Public Affairs, Systemair Group.
Systemair Group energy efficiency






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