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Singapore undertakes new voluntary commitments for ocean protection

Singapore undertakes new voluntary commitments for ocean protection

Singapore will be renewing the 10 voluntary commitments previously submitted at the first United Nations Oceans Conference (UNOC), and undertaking nine new ones for marine protection.

Three of the island state’s new commitments involve environmental research projects. These are related to sustainable management of marine fish populations, the use of solar energy to facilitate coral growth, and a Marine Climate Change Science programme.

Other new commitments seek to spearhead the shipping industry’s green transition, for example by incentivising ship owners to become more sustainable. The country wants to lead the charge on the maritime industry’s transition to energy efficient technologies and low or zero carbon fuels, said its foreign minister Vivian Balakrishnan, delivering an official statement at the UNOC in Lisbon, Portugal, this week.

“The challenges facing the ocean have increased with each passing year. We need to urgently scale up actions to collectively protect the ocean, and mitigate the impacts of climate change,” Dr Balakrishnan told member states.

 

What are voluntary commitments?
At the first UN Ocean Conference which took place in New York in 2017, member states agreed to create a list of commitments to further the implementation of Sustainable Development Goal 14, “Life Below Water”.

 

Minister for Foreign Affairs Dr Vivian Balakrishnan delivering Singapore’s National Statement at the United Nations Ocean Conference in Lisbon on 28 June 2022. Image: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Singapore.

 

Ocean governance experts that Eco-Business spoke to, however, have expressed doubts about the efficacy of the voluntary commitments. The non-binding nature of these commitments raises questions about their ability to drive ambitious action for marine protection, in Singapore and beyond.

Dr Michelle Voyer, a researcher on ocean governance at Australia’s University of Wollongong, said that there can be problems evaluating whether the commitments have been implemented as planned, or if countries are succeeding in meeting their objectives.

“There is no mechanism that I am aware of at present which tracks the performance over time,” she said.

While submitters can update their commitments with a progress report on the Registry, this is not mandatory.

Globally, over 1900 voluntary commitments have been registered on the Ocean Conference Registry. These have primarily been made by governments and non-governmental organisations, but also include other stakeholders like United Nations entities, academic institutions, and the scientific community.

Based on the registry data, the Singapore government has submitted a total of 33 commitments since 2017, including the nine new ones. A check by Eco-Business found that progress updates have been submitted for at least 23 commitments, and seven commitments have been completed to date.

Ho Xiang Tian, co-founder of environmental advocacy group Lepak in SG, is confident that implementation would not be an issue for Singapore.

“The real question is whether the voluntary commitments can fulfill the needs of what the oceans require to thrive,” he said. “There is a global target to protect 30 per cent of Earth’s oceans by 2030, but I don’t think we are anywhere close to that.”

The 30 by 30 initiative seeks to designate 30 per cent of the world’s land and ocean as protected areas by 2030. More than 100 countries have publicly committed to this goal to date.

Land reclamation and dredging practices need better management: youth activists Kathy Xu, a marine conservationist from Singapore and founder of social enterprise The Dorsal Effect, said she was happy to see the focus on research on ocean species and sustainability in Singapore’s new commitments.

“The areas of the research sound promising, and I’m all for science based methods,” she said.

“However, the devil is in the details that we do not have,” Ms Xu noted. She added that she hopes the government will tap on the diversity of marine expertise in Singapore, including civil society stakeholders, “not just academic ocean conservationists”.

Alice Soewito, a member of environmental group Singapore Youth for Climate Action, said that while Singapore has made advances in the maritime shipping industry, the government could better manage land reclamation and dredging practices.

“These practices can result in chronic sedimentation that harm and kill corals, thereby impacting the rest of the marine ecosystem,” she said.

Since the 1960s, Singapore has adopted an aggressive approach of land reclamation to accommodate industrial activities and a growing population. The island’s land area has expanded by nearly 25 per cent over the last two centuries. The National University of Singapore’s Reef Ecology Lab has said that many coral reef ecosystems were “smothered” by past reclamation practices.

These environmental impacts extend beyond Singapore’s borders. A 2010 report by international NGO Global Witness claimed that sand mining practices in Cambodia’s Koh Kong province, from which Singapore imported sand up till 2016, severely depleted local fish and crab stocks.

Malaysia and Indonesia banned sand exports to Singapore in 1997 and 2007 respectively due to environmental concerns.

On a global scale, Dr Voyer pointed out that many current commitments have a strong emphasis on research and science, as well as capacity development.

“Of course we always need to be improving the knowledge base,” she said. “But I would like to see greater emphasis on recognising the existing capacity within many coastal communities and amongst ocean stakeholders.”

“This includes engaging with local knowledge, and being bold in trying ideas put forward by the communities,” said Dr Voyer.

 

Negotations underway for new global ocean treaty

This year’s Ocean Conference, which took place from 27 June to 1 July, sought to scale up ocean action with a specific focus on science and innovation. Member states adopted a political declaration reaffirming their commitment to ocean conservation.

While this declaration is not binding, it lays the political foundation for an upcoming legally binding instrument — the Intergovernmental Conference on Marine Biodiversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction, colloquially known as the BBNJ Treaty. Singapore serves as the current president of the Intergovernmental Conference and will help to facilitate the fifth round of negotiations taking place in August this year.

In his speech, Dr Balakrishnan called on all delegations to “work towards the conclusion of an ambitious and future-proof BBNJ treaty as soon as possible”.

 


 

Source Eco Business

Students for sustainability… Singapore Institute of Technology’s Ho Xiang Tian

Students for sustainability… Singapore Institute of Technology’s Ho Xiang Tian

Co-founder of environmental advocacy group LepakInSG, and one of the speakers at Singapore’s first climate rally, shares the need to think beyond individual action and focus on systemic change.

“It makes no sense to me that we are told to switch off our lights when not in use, but the lights on Jurong Island [Singapore’s petrochemical hub] never seem to be switched off,” Ho Xiang Tian announced to an audience of 2000 at Singapore’s first climate rally.

In his speech, the co-founder of environmental advocacy group, LepakInSG, argued that the city-state’s climate policies have been insufficient and governmental messaging over-emphasise the importance of individual action although households only contribute to six per cent of carbon emissions. Industries in Singapore, however, are responsible for ten times the amount of emissions.

“Singapore only takes responsibility for 0.11 per cent of the world’s emissions, and that is always the reason cited for our lack of climate action… But we ignore the fact that we are the world’s fifth-largest refinery export hub, or that the fuel we provide to ships and planes emit almost three times of our own national emissions,” he said.

LepakInSG was born out of a dinner with two other friends in 2017, with the initial aim of being a one-stop calendar for green events in Singapore. But after just three days of mind-numbing administrative work, the founders decided to organise fun environmental-related events for themselves.

There’s still a chance to limit the worst consequences of climate change. It’s the hope that we can limit this damage that keeps me going.

The first year of one-off events included environmental board games nights and a nature walk while playing Pokemon Go to observe the flora and fauna that inspired characters in the popular game. By the second year, the group decided to organise programmes with lasting impact.

LepakInSG started the project Sea Our Shores in conjunction with International Year of the Reef in 2018. The entirely volunteer-run team ran monthly workshops about different marine environments in Singapore to raise awareness and action, and simultaneously crowdsourced ideas for the marine conservation communities in Singapore.

In the same year, the team started PublicAction, an initiative to read government publications focused on environmental issues with members of the public and send feedback to relevant government agencies.

Over the years, what started out as a simple idea to consolidate green events in Singapore has evolved into an environmental advocacy group that connects, educates, and aims to improve public literacy on government publications.

In this interview with Eco-Business, Ho shares the importance of systemic change, the best approach for community building, and LepakInSG’s future plans.

 

What are you studying?

I’m studying sustainable infrastructure engineering (land). The brackets mean my focus is on land transport, like railways, MRT lines, tunnels, and signalling. The course basically prepares us for a career in the land transport industry. Initially I wasn’t interested in engineering because I wanted to study sustainability-related courses. But now I realise that there’re a lot of engineering solutions for environmental problems.

 

Do you feel that your university course has prepared you well for a career in sustainability?

It depends on what you mean by sustainability. The course equips you with the technical knowledge, but it doesn’t tell you that this industry [transportation] that you’re going into contributes significantly to sustainability.

The course doesn’t get you to think about what environmental sustainability is. Perhaps it’s referring to a different kind of sustainability, like ensuring that your train system runs smoothly in the long run and doesn’t breakdown.

 

Who are your sustainability role models?

When I was first starting out, I followed two people around a lot; Nor Lastrina Hamid who runs Singapore Youth for Climate Action, and Tan Yi Han who founded the People’s Movement to Stop Haze (PM.Haze). They both take a consultative approach when making decisions in a group. So it isn’t just what they think goes, they ask what everyone else thinks. If anyone disagrees, they find out why that might be so and incorporate it into the final decision. I think that’s really important for community building.

Ria Tan runs the website WildSingapore, and is a nature guide. She has a lot of experience and shares her stories about what she’s done in the past with young people like me, so we don’t make the same mistakes. You can learn a lot just by having lunch with her.

 

What are some of your most memorable sustainability moments?

When I gave a speech at SG Climate Rally, up to that point I had never given a speech to so many people.

For LepakinSG, it was when we were first engaged by different governmental agencies, like the Ministry of Environment and Water Resources (MEWR), or National Climate Change Secretariat (NCCS) for consultations. That’s when we knew that we had enough of a presence for them to respect us and ask for our opinions.

 

What initiatives does LepakInSG organise?

In 2018, we started PublicAction. We read government publications and get the public to give feedback about them, then we share that feedback with the relevant agencies.

The first one we did was on the Sustainable Singapore Blueprint (SSB), which was messy. The SSB is a massive document with five different pillars, and we invited people to give feedback about each one.

2019 was Year Towards Zero Waste. For that, we conducted waste workshops where we tried to get people to think beyond themselves when it comes to waste. Government campaigns are usually about how you as an individual can reduce your waste, by buying only what you need, recycling more, and so on.

But we need to think beyond the individual level, like where does waste really come from? And how can an individual do something about the waste they can’t control, like from industry? We asked people to think about why the domestic recycling rate is so low and how we can change our current systems.

So we focused on moving away from individual action towards systemic change. I think one problem with our messaging was that we put too much attention on systemic change and some people felt powerless. When that happens, people don’t want to do anything.

 

How do people deal with this feeling of powerlessness?

You don’t have to start with the biggest systems. If you can change the system in your school, or your company, that’s a lot more manageable than trying to change the whole system in Singapore. It’s the small wins that keep you going.

 

What keeps you going personally?

It’s the idea that I want a future that is liveable. If you look at the impacts of climate change now, it’s already quite bad. In the future, it’ll only get worse. But how much worse it will get is the big question. There’s still a chance to limit the worst consequences of climate change. It’s the hope that we can limit this damage that keeps me going.

 

What does the rest of the year look like for LepakInSG?

We’re working on a visioning exercise to see what Singapore could look like in 2030. We’ll take government projections, then analyse the science and see how climate change is likely to affect us in 10 years’ time. Then we’ll ask the public if this is a future that they want to see.