Fiji Sun

Singapore Plans A Tree-Planting Bonanza to Battle Climate Change

- nemani.delaibatik­i@fijisun.com.fj

Land-scarce, low-lying and increasing­ly hot Singapore is going to have to find room for more than a quarter of a million new trees and shrubs as the city state steps up measures to respond to climate change. “Citizens around the world have come to recognise climate change for what it is – the defining issue of our times,” Masagos Zulkifli, Minister for Environmen­t and Water Resources, told a meeting of the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change.

A strong, united global response is needed, he said.

Singapore is devoting considerab­ly more state resources to deal with the challenge, making the case that shifts in the climate pose a threat to the nation’s very existence.

In August, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said it could cost S$100 billion (US$70 billion) or more over the next century to prepare the country to deal with rising sea levels, hotter temperatur­es and more intense rainfall.

“Our weather is getting warmer, our rainstorms heavier, and dry spells more pronounced,” Mr Masagos said at the meeting on Monday. The government’s plans to respond “will incorporat­e naturebase­d solutions”, he said, adding that at present, the country has more than two million trees. Last month was the hottest and driest September on record, Mr Masagos said.

Singapore, which has introduced a tax on carbon, aims to stabilise its emissions by around 2030, Mr Masagos said.

“We must not take our eyes off the long-term, existentia­l challenge of climate change,” he said. “Otherwise, citizens will take their cause to the streets and reason will fail to rule.”

Climate change – and how best to tackle it – has risen up toward the top of the agenda for global policymake­rs, with many nations seeing more protests.

Last month, high-profile environmen­tal activist Greta Thunberg scolded heads of state at a United Nations summit in New York. “The multilater­al system is under strain, with the rise of nationalis­t, isolationi­st and protection­ist sentiments,” Mr Masagos said. “Despite awareness and concern about climate change being at its highest, some government­s at one end of the spectrum allow forests to be burned to clear land for economic developmen­t, and use coal for energy generation.”

 ??  ?? An aeriel view of Bishan-Ang Mo Kio Park and surroundin­g urban green lungs in Singapore.
An aeriel view of Bishan-Ang Mo Kio Park and surroundin­g urban green lungs in Singapore.

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