Singapore pares emission cut plans after Copenhagen

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

Wealthy city-state Singapore, with one of the world's best living standards in terms of GDP per capita, has come under fire from environmentalists.

Singapore said on Monday it will go ahead with existing plans to reduce greenhouse gas emissions but further pledged reductions will depend on a successful agreement in global climate talks.                                           

Environment minister Yaacob Ibrahim told parliament on Monday Singapore would start implementing energy efficiency measures announced last year that would cut emissions by 7-11% on business as usual levels by 2020.                                           

This would be below a 16% cut that Singapore pledged just ahead of UN climate talks in Copenhagen last month, which aimed to agree on a global pact but instead ended with a non-binding accord far short of its original goals.                                           

"When a global agreement on climate change is reached we will implement the additional measures to achieve the full 16% reduction below business as usual in 2020," he said.                                           

Wealthy city-state Singapore, with one of the world's best living standards in terms of GDP per capita, has come under fire from environmentalists who point to its energy-intensive economy and high per-capita emissions.                                           

Singapore aims to spur economic growth by increasing its population and attracting further manufacturing investment, which will make cutting absolute emissions difficult, a problem faced by many developing nations who were unwilling to sign up to legally binding cuts.                                           

Another round of global climate talks is scheduled for November 2010 in Mexico.