Singapore Minister for Sustainability and the Environment Grace Fu has said the government has resolved to publish an annual report to detail its progress, efforts and plans in environmental sustainability starting in Financial Year 2023 under the GreenGov.SG initiative, which details how the public sector will lead the way in pursuing sustainable development.
The Government, under GreenGov.SG, has committed to achieve several sustainability targets by 2030, including for energy, water and waste, and to achieve net-zero emissions around 2045, five years ahead of the national target.
“We will start with reporting Scope 1 and 2 emissions, electricity, and water consumption, with reference to international standards and frameworks,” said Ms Fu.
According to the government, Scope 1 and 2 refer to the different kinds of emissions an entity creates in its operations with Scope 1 referring to direct emissions a company makes while Scope 2 to those made indirectly. There is also Scope 3, which involves emissions that the entity is indirectly responsible for.
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Although a handful of statutory boards, such as the Monetary Authority of Singapore, the National Environment Agency, Singapore’s national water agency PUB and Sentosa Development Corporation have already published sustainability disclosures, all statutory boards will not be required to officialy publish annual environmental sustainability disclosures until FY2024, as part of a move to have the public sector lead the way with decarbonisation efforts.
“They have been systematically incorporating sustainability in their decision-making and risk management frameworks to achieve concrete sustainability outcomes,” Ms Fu noted.
The Ministry of Sustainability and the Environment (MSE) said it hoped to encourage more companies to track, plan and disclose their environmental performance in the transition towards a greener economy.
From next year, the Government will also progressively introduce environmental sustainability considerations into its tender evaluation process, beginning with large construction tenders and information, communications and technology (ICT) tenders which account for more than 60 per cent of the value of government procurement contracts awarded.
Up to 5 per cent of the tender evaluation points will be set aside for environmental sustainability.
“Such projects include public infrastructure, industrial buildings, and office ICT equipment contracts. Using ICT as an example, in addition to the requirement of matching the best-in-class in energy efficiency, we may evaluate the efforts of the tenderers in reducing packaging, and carbon footprint of their operations, when we evaluate the tender bids,” said Ms Fu.
Story was adapted from CNA.