logo
GREE Opens Singapore Office to Drive Asia-Pacific Expansion with World-Class Air Conditioning Technologies

GREE Opens Singapore Office to Drive Asia-Pacific Expansion with World-Class Air Conditioning Technologies

The Sun26-06-2025
SINGAPORE- Media OutReach Newswire - 26 June 2025 - Global electronics manufacturer GREE has officially launched its Singapore branch, marking a key milestone in its expansion in Southeast Asia.
Widely recognised as the global market leader in air conditioning, GREE has held the top market share in household air conditioners for 18 consecutive years, according to Euromonitor International. Backed by 46 cutting-edge technologies developed entirely in-house, GREE's commercial air conditioning systems span 10 major series and thousands of models, comprehensively serving a wide range of environments, from super high-rise buildings and large transport hubs to data centres, hospitals, factories, and industrial sites.
GREE has also maintained the No. 1 position in China's central air conditioning market for 13 consecutive years. In 2024, it captured over 15% of the market, leading the sales rankings among mainstream brands. Notably, its modular units, variable refrigerant flow (VRF) systems, and unitary air conditioners achieved market shares of 12.7%, 20%, and 35.6%, respectively. These strong results further reinforce GREE's position as a global air conditioning leader, driven by continuous innovation and comprehensive, scenario-based solutions.
Singapore as a Strategic Gateway for GREE's Expansion
--> Driving the Global Expansion of GREE's with Singapore as a Strategic Hub
In recent years, GREE has focused on expanding its presence in overseas markets, particularly in ASEAN countries such as Malaysia and Indonesia. As of today, self-branded products account for 70% of the company's total export volume. As the heart of Southeast Asia, a key financial and trade hub, Singapore serves as a strategic base for GREE's regional expansion. Moving forward, GREE Singapore will spearhead strategic planning, investment, and market research, while driving business development to bring the company's innovative cooling solutions across the region.
--> Anchoring Singapore's High-Standards Market as a Launchpad for Global Innovation
Singapore upholds the world's highest standards for energy-efficient air conditioning technologies, such as the Green Mark Platinum certification. It is also a hub for top global design consultants like Arcadis and Arup, providing an ideal platform for the incubation and validation of advanced technical solutions.
With its groundbreaking technology, GREE's 'Zero Carbon Source' photovoltaic storage direct current soft load system has achieved an industry-leading photovoltaic direct-drive utilisation rate of 99.04%. Meanwhile, its permanent magnet synchronous variable frequency water chiller is the first Chinese brand to be installed at GlobalFoundries' semiconductor facility, a testament to the strong alignment between GREE's innovations and local standards. By using Singapore as a springboard, GREE is well positioned to promote its self-developed, world-class technologies globally.
--> Strengthening Local Service Capabilities Through Direct Operations
The GREE Singapore team will establish a comprehensive three-pronged service framework. This includes a streamlined after-sales system to ensure prompt and efficient customer support, as well as the development of a regional technical training programme in collaboration with local higher education institutions. Additionally, GREE will work closely with local distributors to deliver an integrated purchasing experience that combines hands-on product demonstrations with robust technical support.
Recognising the humid and coastal climate of Southeast Asia, GREE will also introduce customised solutions such as its Black Fin technology, which significantly enhances corrosion resistance and extends product lifespan.
GREE's First Wave of Products Debuts in Singapore
With the official inauguration of the GREE Singapore Branch, the company has introduced its first wave of products to the local market. The launch includes the CHARMO split wall mounted series, FREE MATCH systems, and variable refrigerant flow (VRF) solutions, all equipped with customised and practical technologies tailored to meet the specific needs of Singaporean consumers.
--> Enhanced Durability with Black Fin Condenser Technology
GREE products are equipped with advanced Black Fin technology, offering 67% greater corrosion resistance compared to traditional blue fin heat exchangers. This makes them particularly well-suited for island climates like Singapore, delivering longer service life and enhanced performance in humid conditions.
--> Advanced Filtration for Healthier Living
GREE's air conditioners are equipped with a multi-layer filtration system featuring tri-color filters, PM2.5 filters, and advanced plasma (Colasma) technology. Together, these features effectively eliminate dust, bacteria, and allergens to ensure cleaner, healthier indoor air. This integrated purification system reflects GREE's commitment to enhancing home environments and promoting long-term wellbeing through innovative design.
--> Intelligent Self-Cleaning and Easy Maintenance Design
GREE air conditioners are thoughtfully designed with self-cleaning functions and easy-to-clean features, reducing maintenance efforts while consistently maintaining high air quality. Equipped with intelligent i-Feel sensing technology, the units automatically adjust temperature settings based on real-time room conditions to ensure optimal comfort. Through the GREE+ app, users can conveniently manage their air conditioners and other smart home devices remotely, as well as monitor energy usage. Wi-Fi connectivity enables seamless, precise control of the home environment for a truly smart and comfortable living experience.
With authorised partners located across Singapore, GREE customers can access air-conditioning products, installation services and technical support. For further assistance, customers may also contact the GREE hotline at 6816 9090.
Looking ahead, GREE's new Singapore office firmly anchors the company's strategic pivot to the Asia-Pacific region. As a global leader in air conditioning, GREE is committed to enhancing modern living in Singapore through energy-efficient technologies and premium products that meet the country's high standards. Leveraging Singapore's position as a regional hub, GREE aims to build an extensive business network across Southeast Asia, expanding its global footprint while advancing sustainable innovation throughout the region and beyond.
About GREE
Founded in 1991, GREE Electric Appliances Inc. of Zhuhai is one of the world's largest manufacturers of air conditioners and smart home appliances. Headquartered in Zhuhai, China, GREE integrates independent research, development, and production across its full product line, including residential and commercial HVAC systems, air purifiers, water heaters, and smart home technologies.
GREE's products are sold in over 160 countries, and the company has held the No.1 global market share in household air conditioners for 18 consecutive years (Euromonitor International). With more than 90,000 employees worldwide and a reputation for innovation, energy efficiency, and high-quality manufacturing, GREE is committed to delivering intelligent, sustainable solutions that improve lives and protect the planet.
GREE Singapore marks the company's first direct presence in the country and serves as a strategic hub for Southeast Asia. The branch leads local operations, customer service and regional business development, bringing GREE's advanced energy efficient air conditioning solutions closer to Singaporean consumers and partners.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stock markets boosted after EU, US strike trade deal
Stock markets boosted after EU, US strike trade deal

New Straits Times

time25 minutes ago

  • New Straits Times

Stock markets boosted after EU, US strike trade deal

HONG KONG: Stock markets rose in Europe and Asia on Monday after the European Union and United States hammered out a deal to avert a potentially damaging trade war. News of the deal, announced by Donald Trump and European Commission head Ursula von der Leyen on Sunday, followed a series of US trade agreements last week, including with Japan, and comes ahead of a new round of China-US talks. Investors were also gearing up for a busy week of data, central bank decisions and earnings from some of the world's biggest companies. Trump and von der Leyen announced at his golf resort in Scotland that a baseline tariff of 15 per cent would be levied on EU exports to the United States. "We've reached a deal. It's a good deal for everybody. This is probably the biggest deal ever reached in any capacity," Trump said, adding that the levies would apply across the board, including for Europe's crucial automobile sector, pharmaceuticals and semiconductors. Brussels also agreed to purchase US$750 billion worth of energy from the United States, as well as make US$600 billion in additional investments. "It's a good deal," von der Leyen said. "It will bring stability. It will bring predictability. That's very important for our businesses on both sides of the Atlantic." Equities built on their recent rally, fanned by relief that countries were reaching deals with Washington. Paris rose more than one per cent at the open, with Frankfurt and London also tracking gains in Hong Kong, Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Wellington, Taipei and Jakarta. Tokyo fell for a second day, having soared about five per cent on Wednesday and Thursday in reaction to Japan's US deal. Singapore, Manila and Mumbai were also lower. The broad gains came after another record day for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq on Wall Street. "The news flow from both the extension with China and the agreement with the EU is clearly market-friendly, and should put further upside potential into the euro... and should also put renewed upside into EU equities," said Chris Weston at Pepperstone. Traders are gearing up for a packed week, with a delegation including US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent holding fresh trade talks with a Chinese team headed by Vice Premier He Lifeng in Stockholm. While in April both countries imposed tariffs that reached triple digits, US duties this year have temporarily been lowered to 30 per cent and China's countermeasures slashed to 10 per cent. The 90-day truce, instituted after talks in Geneva in May, is set to expire on Aug12, 2025. Also on the agenda are earnings from tech titans Amazon, Apple, Meta and Microsoft, as well as data on US economic growth and jobs. The Federal Reserve's latest policy meeting is expected to conclude with officials standing pat on interest rates, though investors are keen to see what their views are on the outlook for the rest of the year in light of Trump's tariffs and recent trade deals. "We think the data supports a Fed on hold in July, but absent a significant upside surprise in the upcoming inflation data, September could be a 'live' meeting for a resumption of rate cuts, especially if economic activity data and possibly overwhelming political pressure force the Fed's hand," said Michael Krautzberger at Allianz. The Bank of Japan is also forecast to hold off on any big moves on borrowing costs.

Urgent need for 'global approach' on AI regulation: UN tech chief
Urgent need for 'global approach' on AI regulation: UN tech chief

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Urgent need for 'global approach' on AI regulation: UN tech chief

GENEVA: The world urgently needs to find a global approach on regulating artificial intelligence, the United Nations' top tech chief said this week, warning that fragmentation could deepen risks and inequalities. Doreen Bogdan-Martin, head of the UN's International Telecommunications Union (ITU) agency, told AFP she hoped that AI "can actually benefit humanity". But as concerns mount over the risks posed by the fast-moving technology – including fears of mass job losses, the spread of deepfakes and disinformation, and society's fabric fraying – she insisted that regulation was key. "There's an urgency to try to get... the right framework in place," she said, stressing the need for "a global approach". Her comments came after US President Donald Trump this week unveiled an aggressive, low-regulation strategy aimed at ensuring the United States stays ahead of China on AI. Among more than 90 proposals, Trump's plan calls for sweeping deregulation, with the administration promising to "remove red tape and onerous regulation" that could hinder private sector AI development. Asked if she had concerns about an approach that urges less, not more, regulation of AI technologies, Bogdan-Martin refrained from commenting, saying she was "still trying to digest" the US plan. 'Critical' "I think there are different approaches," she said. "We have the EU approach. We have the Chinese approach. Now we're seeing the US approach. I think what's needed is for those approaches to dialogue," she said. At the same time, she highlighted that "85 percent of countries don't yet have AI policies or strategies". A consistent theme among those strategies that do exist is the focus on innovation, capacity building and infrastructure investments, Bogdan-Martin said. "But where I think the debate still needs to happen at a global level is trying to figure out how much regulation, how little regulation, is needed," she said. Bogdan-Martin, who grew up in New Jersey and has spent most of her more than three-decade career at the ITU, insisted the Geneva-based telecoms agency that sets standards for new technologies was well-placed to help facilitate much-needed dialogue on the issue. "The need for a global approach I think is critical," she said, cautioning that "fragmented approaches will not help serve and reach all". As countries and companies sprint to cement their dominance in the booming sector, there are concerns that precautions could be thrown to the wind – and that those who lose the race or do not have the capacity to participate will be left behind. 'Huge gap' The ITU chief hailed "mind-blowing" advances within artificial intelligence, with the potential to improve everything from education to agriculture to health care – but insisted the benefits must be shared. Without a concerted effort, there is a risk that AI will end up standing for "advancing inequalities", she warned, cautioning against deepening an already dire digital divide worldwide. "We have 2.6 billion people that have no access to the internet, which means they have no access to artificial intelligence", Bogdan-Martin pointed out. "We have to tackle those divides if we're actually going to have something that is beneficial to all of humanity." Bogdan-Martin, the first woman to serve as ITU secretary-general in the organisation's nearly 160-year history, also stressed the need to get more women into the digital space. "We have a huge gap," she said. "We definitely don't have enough women... in artificial intelligence." The 58-year-old mother of four said it was "a big honour" to be the first woman in her position, to be "breaking the glass ceiling (and) paving the path for future generations". But she acknowledged there was a lot of pressure, "not just to achieve, but to almost overachieve". Bogdan-Martin, who is being backed by the Trump administration to stand for re-election when her four-year mandate ends next year, said she was eager to stay on for a second term. "There is a lot to do." – AFP

Indonesian solar panel manufacturers brush off potential US tariffs
Indonesian solar panel manufacturers brush off potential US tariffs

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Indonesian solar panel manufacturers brush off potential US tariffs

JAKARTA: Solar panel manufacturers in Indonesia are not overly concerned that their United States counterparts have filed trade petitions with Washington that might result in new tariffs, provided that Jakarta pushes for greater domestic adoption of solar photovoltaic systems. Beny Sulaiman, business development and commercial director at PT Jembo Energindo, told The Jakarta Post on Wednesday (July 30) that 'the concerns in Indonesia are relatively small' since the domestic market could absorb locally made solar panels, as long as the government supported this. 'Indonesia is a big country with abundant market potential for renewables. On top of that, the government has been very supportive in significantly increasing [the share of] renewables in the [national] energy mix,' said Beny, who is also an executive at the Indonesian Solar Module Manufacturers Association. The trade petitions, which seek to impose antidumping and countervailing duties, were filed earlier this month by the American Alliance for Solar Manufacturing Trade Committee, according to a Bloomberg article. The group includes major US-based manufacturers like First Solar, Mission Solar Energy and Qcells. The plaintiffs allege that Chinese solar panel producers are flooding the US market with unfairly cheap goods made in factories in Indonesia, Laos and India. The petitions' filing has kicked off a process in which the Commerce Department has 20 days to decide whether to investigate the allegation that imports are unfairly priced or subsidised by a foreign government. Separately, the US International Trade Commission is to determine whether the imported solar panels harm domestic competition. If the commerce and trade authorities conclude that the imports are unfair and injurious. Washington might impose new duties on foreign-made solar panels. This process played out previously in April, when the US government imposed import duties of 3,521 per cent on certain solar power equipment from Cambodia, a year after the same industry alliance petitioned for protection of its members' operations. Three other South-East Asian countries, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam, were also imposed US duties of varying rates, depending on the manufacturer and the products' origin. China-based Trina Solar was subject to a 375 per cent tariff for its products manufactured in Thailand, while China's Jinko Solar was slapped with a 41 per cent tariff on its Malaysian-made products. The US imported solar equipment from the four countries totaling almost US$12 billion, the BBC reported in April, citing US Census Bureau figures. The antidumping and countervailing duties have caused a massive shift in the US solar industry supply chain, prompting an immediate decline in shipments from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam in May, with Indonesia and Laos picking up the slack. Indonesia and Laos saw its solar panel exports to the US balloon to 44 per cent in May from a figure of just 1.9 per cent n May 2024, Bloomberg reported. Meanwhile, India's solar panel exports to the US have been on the rise since 2022. Many Chinese firms have moved their operations to South-East Asia in recent years in a bid to avoid US tariffs since President Donald Trump's first term in 2017-2021. Anindya Bakrie, chairman of the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Kadin), and Shinta Kamdani, chairwoman of the Indonesian Employers Association (Apindo), both said they had not yet caught up with the matter when the Post contacted them for comments on Tuesday. Fabby Tumiwa, executive director of the Institute for Essential Services Reform, told the Post on Wednesday that US solar manufacturers had filed the trade petitions because they were unable to compete with imported solar products. 'The production cost of solar modules in the US is higher than in other countries. Compared to Southeast Asia, China or India, they're far more expensive,' he said. According to Fabby, Chinese solar technologies from were 60 per cent cheaper than those produced in the US. Likewise, Indian and South-East Asian solar panels cost only 20-30 per cent more than those made in China. Fabby suggested that US solar manufacturers were 'under heavy pressure', given that they had only recently commenced production and had therefore 'not reached the economies of scale'. Meanwhile they faced short deadlines, according to Fabby, who said manufacturers had to break even in three years as the industry was advancing rapidly, with new and more efficient solar technologies pushing out previous generations in a cycle of three to five years. 'If they cannot break even in three years, they'll certainly be left behind, because the Chinese move very fast,' he said. 'That's why it's in [US manufacturers'] best interest to shave imports, so they can utilise domestic capacity.' The condition of US solar manufacturers has been exacerbated by the 50 per cent import tariffs the Trump administration has imposed on aluminum and steel, two important precursors for solar technology, driving production costs even higher. While the pressure on the US solar industry was understandable, 'it's unfair to blame other countries [where] production costs are lower', said Fabby, adding that Indonesia's solar panel manufacturers had achieved competitiveness fair and square, without any government subsidies. - The Jakarta Post/ANN

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store