Global Plastic Policy Reviews

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When referring to any of the results of our analysis and/or its concept and design, please cite us accordingly:
Global Plastics Policy Centre (2022) March A., Salam, S., Evans, T., Hilton, J., Fletcher, S. (editors). Global Plastics Policy Review. Revolution Plastics Institute, University of Portsmouth.

Singapore Green Plan 2030

View the policy document
Reviewed under framework: No - insufficient evidence
Key findings: Insufficient evidence to review

The Singapore Green Plan 2030 is a ten-year plan. It is a whole-of-nation sustainable development agenda, and has five key pillars including: 1. City in Nature 2. Energy Reset 3. Sustainable Living 4. Green Economy 5. Resilient Future. The primary driver for this policy was political, supporting the Paris Agreement and the 2030 Agenda and SDGs. The Singapore Green Plan is leaded by five ministries – the Ministries of Sustainability and the Environment (MSE), Trade and Industry (MTI), Transport (MOT), National Development (MND), and Education (MOE) – and supported by the whole of Government (Singapore Green Plan 2030, n.d.).

There was insufficient evidence available to complete the evaluation framework at the time of the assessment. However, a progress update on the Green Plan provided during the Committee of Supply Debate in March 2022 seem to indicate that the policy is progressing well (The National Climate Change Secretariat (NCCS), n.d.; Kumar & Peh, 2022).

(Uploaded in August 2023)

Year:

  • 2021

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Voluntary or legally binding:

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Our methods

Through an analytical framework, we've reviewed over 100 plastic policies. These reviews determine the effectiveness of policies in reducing plastic pollution and we offer recommendations in light of this evidence, to enhance future policy making. You can find out more about our methods on our methods page.

Methods

Guidance

In light of our findings, we've created targeted guidance for Policy Makers, Citizens and Businesses.

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We are confident in our research, however, not all evidence is made publicly available which may affect the outcome of the reviews. Let us know if you have research or evidence that can contribute to our analysis, or a policy you think would be valuable to review!

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