Sewage helps Singapore shake off water shackles
SINGAPORE, July 5 (AFP) – When Singapore said it would not renew a water-supply pact with Malaysia the news hardly caused a ripple in a nation where technology is now flowing through the taps.
In the past, the idea would have seemed dangerous in a resource-starved island that bought almost all its water from its bigger neighbor.
But with Singapore steadily approaching self-sufficiency and exporting technology to recycle sewage into drinking water, there is a growing sense of confidence that it is less vulnerable to Malaysian water pressure.
''This could mean that the Singapore public is no longer as exercised by water security,'' the pro-government Straits Times said in an editorial after the April announcement.
''Gradually shedding dependence on Malaysia is high on Singaporeans' wish list, if only to eliminate a source of neighborly conflict.''
Singapore has two accords to buy raw water from Malaysia, which evicted the island from a federation in 1965. The first will expire next year – and will not be renewed – and the second will lapse in 2061.
Singapore is confident that by then it will be able to supply all of its water needs if necessary – a major boost to its strategic security.
''Because of our sustained efforts, we have come a long way in water self-sufficiency,'' said former prime minister Goh Chok Tong.
Cutting dependence on Malaysian water would help ease tensions because ''whenever there were serious bilateral disagreements, some Malaysian politicians would use water as leverage to pressure us to compromise in their favor,'' he said.
Technology has played a vital role in Singapore's dramatic success in turning a weakness into an opportunity to not only become self-sufficient in water but make billions exporting the technology as well.
The city-state is currently hosting the annual Singapore International Water Week, which gathers the world's top experts on the subject.
''Water, the foundation of life, is at the heart of a daily crisis faced by millions of the world's people,'' said Noeleen Heyzer, executive secretary of the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.
She told the conference about 1.1 billion people worldwide have no access to clean water and more than two billion lack basic access to sanitation.
In May, Singapore opened its biggest and most advanced plant that purifies used water until it is fit for humans to drink and for use in factories.
Water flushed from toilets and kitchen sinks is pushed through a series of membranes to remove impurities, producing an end product branded as NEWater that used to be ridiculed but is now widely accepted by the public.
The latest NEWater plant, built by state-linked SembCorp Industries and the fifth such facility in Singapore, can produce 228,000 cubic meters (50 million gallons) of ultra-clean water per day.
This is enough to fill 90 Olympic-size swimming pools, said the Public Utilities Board (PUB), the national water agency.


