Singapore's Carbon Tax — A Deep Dive
How a small island nation became Southeast Asia's climate policy pioneer.
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~60 Mt
Target peak emissions by 2030
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SGD 45
Carbon tax per tCO₂e (2026-27, in effect)
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28
Article 6.2 bilateral agreements
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Policy Overview |
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Singapore's Carbon Pricing Act, which came into effect in 2019, makes the city-state the first in Southeast Asia to implement a carbon tax. This landmark policy reflects Singapore's commitment to the Paris Agreement and its commitment to peak emissions at ~60 MtCO₂e by 2030 before declining to net-zero by 2050. The tax applies to approximately 80% of Singapore's emissions across 50 facilities, covering power generation, petrochemical production, refining, and chemical manufacturing. Direct emitters (Scope 1) face mandatory reporting and taxation, while Scope 2 (indirect) emissions are monitored but not yet taxed. The tax is designed to incentivize emissions reduction while maintaining economic competitiveness. Companies can offset up to 5% of liabilities using International Carbon Credits (ICCs) approved under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, providing flexibility and linkages to global carbon markets. |
NDC Commitments
Peak emissions: ~60 MtCO₂e by 2030. Achieve net-zero by 2050. Interim targets under Paris Agreement Article 6 cooperation frameworks. |
Carbon Tax Pricing Trajectory (2019–2030)
Pricing Schedule
| Period | SGD/tCO₂e | USD/tCO₂e | Notes |
| 2019–2023 | SGD 5 | USD 3.70 | Launch phase, low rate |
| 2024–2025 | SGD 25 | USD 18.50 | 5x increase, still transitional |
| 2026–2027 | SGD 45 | USD 33.30 | Current rate (2026), aligns with EU baseline |
| 2028–2030 | SGD 65+ | USD 48+ | Phased increase to meet NDC targets |
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International Carbon Credits |
Singapore's carbon tax framework includes provisions for offsetting liabilities through International Carbon Credits (ICCs) under Article 6.2 of the Paris Agreement. This mechanism allows companies to meet obligations by purchasing high-quality credits from Article 6.2 bilateral agreements with other countries, provided they meet strict eligibility criteria.
Up to 5% of carbon tax liabilities can be offset using approved ICCs. This flexibility encourages global emissions reduction while maintaining fiscal certainty for regulated entities. Singapore has established bilateral agreements with over 28 countries under Article 6.2, creating a diversified portfolio of offsetting options.
ICC Eligibility Requirements
Approved standards: ISO 14064-2 (GHG quantification), VCS (Verified Carbon Standard), Gold Standard, CDM methodologies under UN FCCC framework.
Article 6.2 Bilateral Agreements Status
| Country | Status | Notes |
| Papua New Guinea | Implementation Agreement | Forestry & REDD+ projects |
| Ghana | Implementation Agreement | Renewable energy, energy efficiency |
| Bhutan | Implementation Agreement | Hydropower & forestry |
| Chile | Implementation Agreement | Solar & wind energy |
| Peru | Implementation Agreement | Amazon protection, sustainable agriculture |
| Rwanda | Implementation Agreement | Clean cookstove, renewable energy |
| Paraguay | Implementation Agreement | Hydropower development |
| Thailand | Implementation Agreement | Energy efficiency, biomass |
| Vietnam | Implementation Agreement | Renewable energy, methane reduction |
| Mongolia | Implementation Agreement | Renewable energy, land use |
| Malaysia | Memorandum of Understanding | Framework under negotiation |
| Cambodia | Memorandum of Understanding | REDD+, sustainable forestry |
| Colombia | Memorandum of Understanding | Amazon forest preservation |
| Kenya | Memorandum of Understanding | Renewable energy, environmental monitoring |
| Morocco | Memorandum of Understanding | Solar energy development |
| Dominican Republic | Memorandum of Understanding | Renewable energy, waste management |
| Sri Lanka | Memorandum of Understanding | Renewable energy, forestry |
| Costa Rica | Memorandum of Understanding | Geothermal energy, conservation |
| Zambia | Memorandum of Understanding | Hydropower, land use projects |
| Philippines | Memorandum of Understanding | Renewable energy, mangrove protection |
| Malawi | Memorandum of Understanding | Clean cooking, forestry |
| Ethiopia | Memorandum of Understanding | Renewable energy, afforestation |
| Brazil | Memorandum of Understanding | Atlantic Forest protection, biofuels |
Projected ICC Demand & Market Pricing
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Singapore's regulated emitters are projected to demand approximately 3 million tonnes of ICCs annually under the current 5% offset allowance. As carbon prices increase and compliance costs rise, demand is expected to reach 21 million tonnes by 2030, driving up prices for premium project categories. Price premiums vary by project type, with nature-based solutions (forestry, wetlands) commanding 15–25% premiums over energy-based credits. Clean cookstove projects in East Africa are among the most sought-after, with prices expected to reach USD 37.80/tonne by 2030. |
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Premium cookstove credits (Rwanda, Malawi, Ethiopia) are expected to cost SGD 45–55 (USD 33–40) by 2027. By 2030, as demand peaks, premium projects may reach SGD 63 (USD 37.80), reflecting scarcity and higher co-benefits such as health and livelihood improvements.
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Net-Zero Initiatives & Market Infrastructure |
Climate Solutions in Action
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SolarNova Initiative
2.8 GW solar capacity target by 2030. Incentivizes rooftop solar installations across industrial and commercial sectors. |
Green Transport
EV adoption incentives. 600,000 battery electric vehicles by 2040, phase-out of petrol cars by 2045. |
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Green Building
90% of buildings to be Green Mark certified by 2030. Energy efficient retrofits across the built environment. |
Green Innovation
R&D funding for carbon capture, hydrogen, and advanced materials. Support for sustainable startup ecosystems. |
Carbon Credit Trading Platforms
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Climate Impact Exchange (CIX)
Singapore's primary voluntary carbon credit exchange. Lists premium verified credits from global projects. Transparent pricing, real-time settlement, and standardized contracts. Launched 2024. ~50M credits listed annually. |
Article 6 Credit eXchange (ACX)
Bilateral ITMO trading platform for Article 6.2 corresponding adjustments. Direct government-to-government settlement, audited by independent verifiers. Operational since 2022. Facilitates 80% of Singapore's Article 6 transfers. |
All carbon tax revenues are ringfenced for climate initiatives. Approximately 50% supports green R&D, 30% funds public-sector emissions reductions (buildings, transport, waste), and 20% is allocated to supporting vulnerable communities and ensuring just transition. This ensures climate action does not disproportionately impact lower-income households.
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