Date Published: 28 Jul 2008
1 The Inter-Ministerial Committee
on Sustainable Development (IMCSD),
set up in February 2008, has articulated
its vision for Singapore's sustainable
development in the next 10 to 15 years,
and invited the public to offer their
views on key priority areas for study.
2 Said Minister for National Development,
Mah Bow Tan, "Our vision is for
Singapore to be a lively yet live-able
home, with a vibrant economy and high
quality living environment. Today many
of us are concerned about higher fuel
prices and ever-increasing demand for
resources. While we must tackle these
important issues, the uncertainties
remind us that we cannot just look
at our present needs, but should think
ahead to secure our future. Singapore
is our home, not just for the current
but also future generations. By planning
now for Singapore's sustainable
development in the next 10 to 15 years,
we ensure two key things. First, we
can be more efficient in using resources
to grow our economy and stay competitive.
Second, we can ensure that, even as
our population grows, all of us continue
to enjoy clean air and clean water
in an attractive, quality living environment."
3 Minister for the Environment and
Water Resources, Dr Yaacob Ibrahim
noted that climate change concerns
have further highlighted the importance
of pursuing an environmentally sustainable
path to growth and development. He
said, "We should play our part
in reducing carbon emissions that lead
to global warming. If Singapore can
address energy conservation and efficiency
with the same resolve as we have done
in water management, it will not only
enable our economy to be more competitive,
but will add to our contribution to
mitigating climate change." He
added that the Committee will look
into making both new and existing buildings
more energy and resource efficient.
Resource efficiency will also be actively
promoted amongst industry and businesses,
as well as within the transport sector
4 This area of resource efficiency
is one of three priorities identified
by the IMCSD following a series of
dialogue sessions with representatives
from the private and people sectors.
There was broad agreement that the
effective management of scarce resources
such as water, energy, and land will
become even more important with rising
resource costs worldwide. The second
area is pollution control to maintain
good air and water quality in Singapore
that will support our larger population
and take into account economic needs.
The third area is improving the quality
of the physical environment to ensure
that Singapore continues to be a clean,
green and attractive city, with green
and blue spaces for all to enjoy. The
attached document in Appendix
I provides
more details on the IMCSD's work
and the areas being studied.
5 In addressing these priority areas,
efforts will also be required on two
supporting fronts - encouraging
people and industries to adopt practices
which are sustainable in the long term,
and developing new capabilities and
technologies which optimize resources
and improve environmental performance.
Singapore can develop in a sustainable
manner only if lifestyles and habits
change. New technologies will also
have to be harnessed to improve performance
and overcome current limits to growth.
6 Senior Minister of State for Trade
and Industry, S Iswaran noted, "It
is important for us to push for resource
efficiency as an extension of our productivity
movement, as this will directly determine
how cost competitive we can be in a
resource constrained future. Having
a clean, green and healthy environment
will also help Singapore to attract
talent and investments." Minister
for Transport, Raymond Lim said that "Public
transport, is, by far, the most efficient
mode of transport, both in terms of
land and energy usage. Therefore, a
key strategy is to encourage a modal
shift from private to public transport.
This is the reason why the government
will be investing heavily in our public
transport infrastructure, to the tune
of some $40 billion over the next 12
years. Our aim is to make public transport
an attractive and choice mode, to encourage
a decisive shift to greater public
transport usage, even for those who
can well afford cars. This strategy
will ensure sustainability, a quality
living environment, and a more fuel
efficient transport system as a whole."
7 The Committee highlights that measures
to enhance sustainability such as
improving resource efficiency should
result in cost-savings to businesses
and individuals. Some measures could
mean additional costs in the short
term to reap longer term benefits
for individuals and businesses. The
IMCSD will take into consideration
the current environment of rising
costs in studying recommendations.
Minister for Finance, Tharman Shanmugaratnam
assured that the IMCSD will take
a bold but practical approach. "The
IMCSD will be pragmatic and result-oriented.
It will assess the effectiveness
and benefits of the various options
against their costs to businesses
and consumers. We will set meaningful
goals but pace the changes so that
everyone can adjust smoothly."
8 Since its establishment in February
2008, the IMCSD has held dialogue sessions
with people and private sector representatives
and conducted various inter-ministry
deliberations. The IMCSD is now launching
a website, www.sustainablesingapore.gov.sg,
to solicit public feedback and suggestions
on the key priority areas for review.
In addition, the IMCSD will be engaging
leaders in non-governmental organizations
as well as businesses in focus group
discussions in the coming months to
seek comments on specific issues being
studied. The feedback and recommendations
received will be factored into the
IMCSD's deliberations before
it releases its report next year. This
report will serve as a blueprint for
Singapore to achieve its vision as
a lively and liveable city.
9 Said Minister for the Environment
and Water Resources, Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, "A
sustainable Singapore has to be built
jointly by the government with the
people and private sectors. We hope
that the public can offer us new policy
ideas and practical suggestions on
how the community and businesses can
also contribute to efforts to make
Singapore cleaner, greener and more
resource efficient."
10 The IMCSD is co-chaired by Minister
for National Development Mr Mah Bow
Tan, and Minister for the Environment
and Water Resources, Dr Yaacob Ibrahim
and includes Minister for Finance Mr
Tharman Shanmugaratnam, Minister for
Transport Mr Raymond Lim, and Senior
Minister of State for Trade & Industry
Mr S Iswaran as members.
Appendix I: Background on IMCSD's
Work
1 Over the past 40 years, good economic
growth has improved our standard of
living. At the same time, we have focused
our effort on building a garden city,
with good urban planning and pollution
control as key considerations. Today,
we live in a clean city with high standards
of public health. We breathe clean
air and are able to commute efficiently.
We enjoy access to well planned parks
and nature reserves. Our clean water
bodies provide us reliable water supply
as well as opportunities for sports
and recreation.
2 Maintaining what we have achieved
and making further improvements will
be challenging. On the domestic front,
greater economic and population growth
will strain our living environment
as well as our scarce land, water and
energy resources. On the global front,
rising fuel costs and higher demand
for resources present uncertainties
for the international economy, which
will impact on Singapore's small
and open economy. Climate change further
compounds the challenges as it requires
early action by all countries to reduce
carbon emissions, which cause global
warming. It is a global problem which
must be dealt with by the collective
efforts of the international community,
in a manner that does not unduly penalize
the economic needs of individual countries.
As a responsible member of the international
community, Singapore would want to
play our part in mitigating greenhouse
gas emissions. We would also wish to
sustain economic growth and maintain
our quality of life. By being more
efficient in the way we use resources,
Singapore would be contributing towards
reducing carbon emissions while positioning
ourselves well for a more carbon-constrained
world that may emerge if ongoing negotiations
on climate change result in a post-2012
global agreement.
Vision for Singapore : Lively and
Liveable Global City
3 Sustainable development for Singapore
means being able to support future
economic and population growth while
maintaining a quality living environment
that is clean, green and healthy. The
vision for Singapore is to be a lively
and liveable global city - a
city that is distinctive in its ability
to offer a unique combination of economic
opportunity, vibrant lifestyle and
quality environment, providing a good
home for current and future generations
of Singaporeans. It would also be a
city that continues to be attractive
to the foreign talent and investments
which help us to grow the economy and
high-value jobs.
Overall Approach
4 The IMCSD will take a strategic
and long term perspective, based on
the pragmatic and measured approach
that has guided decision-making from
the onset of Singapore's development.
We have made significant investments
in national infrastructure, environmental
protection, water supply, transport
and greenery, where the long term benefits
justify the costs.
5 The IMCSD recognizes that the task
is complex as trade-offs would continue
to be necessary in some instances.
The costs and benefits of proposed
measures have to be carefully assessed
and weighed with other options. We
have thus far taken a market-oriented
approach in pricing resources such
as energy and water. Going forward,
this remains important as subsidies
can distort market signals which help
consumers and industry better adjust
to market conditions. The Committee
will look into effective measures to
overcome market failures that impede
decisions that are cost-effective over
the longer term for people and businesses.
Implementation will be carefully studied
to ensure that regulatory changes that
may be required are appropriately paced
to minimize disruptive adjustments.
6 This blueprint for Singapore's
sustainability cannot be drawn up by
the government alone. The public, community
groups and industry play an important
and constructive role in providing
ideas and feedback on the most effective
and practical means to achieve the
desired outcomes. As such, the engagement
of key stakeholders across the public,
private and people sectors is a key
feature of this exercise.
Priority Areas
7 To achieve the vision and address
the domestic and international challenges
which are emerging, the IMCSD will
focus its effort on three priority
areas, namely - resource management,
pollution control and the quality of
the physical environment. As a small
city-state that imports most of its
resource needs, Singapore cannot be
truly self-sufficient. Achieving resource
efficiency will be crucial to sustaining
our future cost competitiveness and
growth. As our economy continues to
grow, different activities will be
located in closer proximity and new
efforts in pollution control will also
be necessary to tackle all sources
of pollution such as industry and transport.
With our population density increasing,
we need innovative measures to maintain
cleanliness and enhance the physical
environment of our city so that our
people continue to have attractive
spaces for leisure and social activities.
This will ensure that growth does not
come at the expense of our quality
of life.
8 Concurrently, further efforts will
be made on two supporting fronts - encouraging
people and businesses to adopt practices
that are sustainable in the long term and developing
new capabilities and technologies which
optimize resources
and improve environmental performance.
As Singapore grows and becomes even
more compact, fiscal measures alone
will not be sufficient to ensure that
we can sustain a high quality living
environment. We also require a more
sustainable community in Singapore
that adopts environmentally responsible
lifestyles and habits. At the same
time, we will invest in new technologies
that will help us achieve higher environmental
performance and transcend current limits
to growth.
9 The IMCSD is actively studying
a range of measures to make the way
we live, work, play and commute more
sustainable.
The Way We Live and Play…
10 The
general feedback that the committee
has received so far is that we should
seek to make the existing stock of
buildings more energy and resource
efficient, as they form the bulk of
our built environment. The IMCSD is
studying additional measures to promote
Green Mark adoption among existing
buildings. It will also study ways
to make public housing in Singapore
even more sustainable in its design,
construction and maintenance. To further
distinguish Singapore as a City in
a Garden, new areas such as skyrise
greenery, and measures to better document
and protect existing biodiversity are
being studied too.
The Way We Work…
11 Resource
efficiency will be actively promoted
among industry and businesses.
The Committee will be engaging business
and industry leaders to discuss measures
to enhance resource efficiency within
business operations, with a focus on
energy and water efficiency. The committee
is also studying measures that industries
can adopt to further mitigate the impact
on our environment in a cost-effective
manner. A realistic approach will be
adopted, taking into account international
standards and global best practice,
in charting new strategies to position
Singapore globally as a hub for sustainable
development solutions.
The Way We Commute…
12 Efforts to encourage greater use
of public transport contribute to sustainable
development since public transport
not only minimises land requirements
but is also the most energy efficient
mode of transport. This is consistent
with the Land Transport Master Plan
which MOT launched earlier this year.
The Committee will further study means
to promote public transport as a choice
mode. It will also consider how to
facilitate non-motorized means, such
as cycling, as additional modes of
transport for short distances for intra-town
commute purposes. As with the built
environment and the industry sector,
the Committee will look into how to
gear the transport sector toward greater
fuel efficiency and cleaner vehicular
emissions.
Public Consultation Process
13 The IMCSD has launched a website
www.sustainablesingapore.gov.sg to
seek public feedback. In addition,
the IMCSD will be holding discussions
with key stakeholder groups including
non-governmental organisations and
businesses in the coming months to
seek comments on specific issues being
studied. The feedback and recommendations
received will be factored into the
IMCSD's deliberations before
it releases its report next year.