Posted: 03 December 2010 1332 hrs
SINGAPORE :
Singapore prides itself on being a clean and green city but a booming
economy and a high-consumption lifestyle have made it one of the world's
biggest carbon polluters per person.
As a major United Nations
summit is being held in Mexico to find ways of curbing the carbon
emissions blamed for global warming, Singapore's environmental balancing
act poses challenging questions for the rest of Asia and the world.
Singapore's
green credentials are in many ways very strong and it is establishing
itself as a regional renewable energy hub.
Yet, if all Asians
emulated Singaporeans' modern and often luxurious lifestyles, greenhouse
gas emissions would spike alarmingly.
"If everyone in the world
enjoyed the same level of consumption as the average Singaporean, we
would need three planets to meet the demands placed on our resources,"
World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) spokesman Chris Chaplin said.
Singapore
was last month listed by the British global risk advisory firm
Maplecroft as the world's seventh largest carbon dioxide (CO2) emitter
relative to its population size.
Ahead of it were only the United
Arab Emirates, Australia, the United States, Canada, the Netherlands
and Saudi Arabia.
Maplecroft's index was calculated by evaluating
annual CO2 emissions from energy use, emissions per capita and
cumulative emissions of a country over more than a century -- 1900 to
2006.
"The lack of 'clean' energy sources coupled with the growth
in Singapore’s economy and the increasing use of cars as well as
electronic appliances such as air-conditioners contribute to Singapore's
emissions," Maplecroft said in a statement to AFP.
Despite a
punishing auto levy and road charges, the number of motor vehicles on
its roads reached 925,518 in 2009, up more than 27 percent in five
years, with private cars making up 60 percent of the total, official
figures show.
In a separate list, the WWF ranked Singapore 21st
in the world in terms of ecological footprint, or the demand for
resources per person, ahead of such countries as Germany, France and
Britain.
WWF's calculation covered not only emissions -- the
biggest component of humanity's carbon footprint -- but also demand
placed by people on arable land, fishing grounds, forest and grazing
land worldwide.
Singapore authorities insist, however, that that
the country has had no choice but to rely on imported fossil fuel to
power its rapid industrialisation.
The trade-reliant economy,
valued at 200 billion US dollars in 2009, is tipped to expand by a
massive 15 percent this year.
With a land area smaller than that
of New York City, Singapore has no space among its five million citizens
for wind farms, while it is devoid of hydro and geothermal power
sources.
"We are dependent on fossil fuels because our small size
severely limits our ability to switch to alternative energies," the
National Environment Agency (NEA) said in a statement to AFP.
It
said Maplecroft's index neither reflected Singapore's efforts to reduce
its carbon emissions nor took into account its unique circumstances.
"As
a small city-state, the use of per capita emissions inflates our carbon
emissions," it said, noting that overall, Singapore accounts for less
than 0.2 percent of global emissions.
Nevertheless, the
government said it was committed to the fight against climate change and
was taking steps to reduce the growth of its emissions, including
switching from oil to natural gas to produce electricity.
Singapore
is investing heavily in clean energy technologies -- it has allocated
770 million dollars to develop innovative energy solutions -- and is
building a liquefied natural gas terminal that will be ready by 2013.
This
will allow access to gas sources beyond neighbouring Indonesia and
Malaysia.
It is also pushing its people to do more recycling,
doubling its already expansive rail network by 2020 and testing electric
vehicles for commercial use.
In another positive move, Singapore
has offered itself as a "living laboratory" where global energy firms
can develop and test new technologies before mass production.
Norway's
Renewable Energy Corp (REC) opened one of the world's biggest solar
technology manufacturing facilities in Singapore in November, a project
costing nearly two billion dollars.
Vestas, a Danish manufacturer
of wind turbines, already has a global research and development centre
in the city-state.
"Singapore has been very wise in the way they
are approaching this," REC's chief executive Ole Enger said. "They have
made Singapore a global hub for renewable energy."
- AFP /ls
more pollution with more population.
Ban air con in hdb flats lah.
ban mian.