The hot weather we’re experiencing might not be just temporary or seasonal thing. The island is actually heating up at twice the speed of the rest of the world, according to the Meteorological Service Singapore (MSS), and as quoted by PM Lee in his National Day Rally speech. Singapore is roughly 1° hotter today than it was in the 1950s.
Exploring this rather pertinent issue, episode 8 of Channel NewsAsia’s (CNA’s) Why it Matters programme sees host Joshua Lim speaking to experts to learn more about how global warming is affecting the island of Singapore. The episode is called Killer Heat.
One Dr Muhammad Eeqmal Hassim, a senior research scientist with the MSS Centre for Climate Research Singapore warned that the country’s maximum daily temperature is anticipated to reach up to 35-37 °Celsius in the next 80 years in 2100 if carbon emissions remain unchanged.
But in Singapore, this is worsened by the fact that the humidity is high all year round, which would lead to potentially deadly consequences.
“When temperature and humidity get high enough, our bodies struggle to cope,” explain Dr Eeqmal. “We get higher heat stress levels. It can actually be quite lethal for us.”
Speaking to Professor Matthias Roth from the National University of Singapore’s Department of Geography, Mr Lim finds out that the rising temperatures are attributed to global warming and the Urban Heat Island (UHI). The UHI happens when the heat is trapped by buildings and roads, making urban areas hotter than rural ones.
In the programme, the temperate recorded at the rural Lim Chu Chang area of farms and forests was about 24.8 °Celsius while the temperate at the heavily developed Orchard Road on the same night was four degrees warmer, at 29.1 °Celsius.
The irony here is that a major factor that contributes to the build-up of heat in urban are is the thing we use most to keep ourselves cool – air-conditioners. Every office building, housing block, and mall in Singapore rely on air-conditioners which end up released a lot of hot air into the atmosphere. The hot air is subsequently trapped in urban surfaces which in turn causes external temperatures to rise even further.
Professor Gerhard Schmitt, head of a research team called “Cooling Singapore” at the Singapore-ETH Centre, explained the problem with stacked air-conditioning units: “The bottom one is ejecting heat to the outside, but this heat is then sucked in by the next one, and the next one and the next. The higher you go, the higher the temperature that comes out.”
So the higher the house or office, the more they need to cool the temperature using air-conditioners and therefore the higher their electricity bill would be.

What does global warming mean for Singapore?

The episode also explored the effects that rising temperatures would have in Singapore. The main problem is high humidity which, when combined with high heat, can have deadly consequences on the human body.
In highly humid weathers, sweat doesn’t evaporate as quickly as it does in drier places. This means that the human body will have to expend more energy to stay cool in warm weather, leading to exhaustion and worse, a heat stroke. Heatstrokes can happen when your body’s core temperature goes beyond 40 °Celsius. At that point, your body won’t be able to effectively and sufficiently expel heat. Severe heat strokes can lead to organ damage and are sometimes fatal.
In Singapore, the relative humidity ranges between 90% in the morning to about 60% in the afternoon if it doesn’t rain, says the MSS. When it does rain, and for a long period, then relative humidity often reaches 100%.
So on the urban island of Singapore, the risk of heat strokes is very real.

What can we do?

On whether anything can be done to stop this increase in temperature, Dr Roth talked about the importance of Singapore’s remaining forests. He said that it is crucial to leave those forests untouched and ensure it is protected from future development.
We all know that forests are the Earth’s lungs, but they’re also the Earth’s natural, sustainable air-conditioners. Without them, we’re only making harder for ourselves to reduce or at least mitigate the rising temperatures.
On whether rooftop gardens and vertical urban gardens or even green facades on buildings would help mitigate rising temperatures, Dr Roth isn’t confident it will make much of a difference.
“The research that has not really shown that greening initiatives have a beneficial effect on the local microclimate in terms of reducing the actual urban heat island effect,” he said.
The UN released a paper in 2018 saying that we had only 12 years to do what we can to cut carbon emissions by half or risk heading into a climate catastrophe.
On that note, Dr Schmitt said that every person in Singapore can contribute to fighting global warming as “every individual in Singapore controls about 30% of all the energy consumed or produced here”.
Some steps individuals can take include switching to public transport. Also, turning up the air-conditioning by just 1 °Celsius can reduce your air-con bill by as much as 5%.
But even after all that, people in Singapore might just have to get used to high temperatures. In places where fatal heat strokes are reported, it’s usually where temperature increases were sudden and drastic. Whereas in Singapore temparatures are rising more gradually, which allows people more of a chance to adapt to the heat.
However, one Dr Li did warn that even if the high temperature doesn’t kill you, it can significant affect your life. So there is still cause for concern.
In his National Day Rally speech this year, PM Lee Hsien Loong spent some time talking about climate change, calling it “one of the gravest challenges facing humankind”. He then said that Singapore will need about S$100 billion to tackle the issue of climate change and rising sea levels effectively. Some of the measures mentioned include adding one more pump house at Marina Barrage, regaining offshore islands on the eastern coast of Singapore and producing polders.

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

WP’s Jamus Lim urges public to refrain from sharing false news that 16yo died due to COVID-19 vaccine

The Workers’ Party (WP) Member of Parliament (MP) for Sengkang GRC Jamus…

执法人员飞踢电动滑板车骑士 陆交局调查、不姑息偏离守则行为

对于网络上疯传,有执法人员飞踢电动滑板车骑士的争议视频,陆路交通管理局在今晚(11日)于脸书公开回应,指当局目前已介入调查,且不会姑息任何偏离执法守则的行为。 当局指出,昨日傍晚约6时40分,一组陆交局执法人员和策安(Certis Cisco)辅警组成的队伍,正在勿洛蓄水池路一带进行执法任务。 有关辅警发现一名电动滑板车骑士,在勿洛北三道行驶,于是发信号指示停车,孰料骑士竟避开辅警。最终在下个路口北另一辅警截停(即网传视频中,被飞踢)。 当局连同警方、策安公司已介入调查。当局解释,策安乃是在合约下协助陆交局进行执法活动。 与此同时,陆交局指有关骑士在公路上使用未注册、重达30.54公斤不符规格的电动滑板车,目前已被当局没收及调查。 有关视频相信是被其中一辆轿车的行车记录器拍到,显示一辆电动滑板车正在靠左边车道行驶,似乎是想要躲避执法人员。 在视频最后第8秒,执法人员使出全身力气,冲向对面马路,想要先挡在电动滑板车面前,让它停驶却无果,最后使出“无影脚”飞踢电动滑板车,而电动滑板车则翻向路边倒下。 在视频最后第8秒,执法人员使出全身力气,冲向对面马路,想要先挡在电动滑板车面前,让它停驶却无果,最后使出“无影脚”飞踢电动滑板车,而电动滑板车则翻向路边倒下。 视频一出,立刻引起网民疯传,不同的声音也随之而来。部分网民认为执法人员正在执行公务,飞踢是为了阻止电动滑板车的行驶;但有者也担忧执法过度,没必要用过度的暴力对付违规者。

拘留14天、社区服务130小时! 社会新鲜人偷拍女子如厕罪成

新加坡管理大学毕业生,Hoon Qi Tong,被控在实习期间,于工作场所偷拍女子如厕,被判处两周的短期拘留和社区服务。 被告首次拍摄时,偷拍了一名女同事的裙底视频,但是他很快就对此失去了兴趣,于是决定尝试偷拍女子如厕,以期从中获得乐趣。 失败了两次后,他在女厕偷拍一名女同事如厕时,当场被逮捕。 于今年初毕业的被告,在法庭上承认侵犯他人隐私,或将被判不超过一年的监禁、罚款或两者兼施。他还面临一项控状,尚交由法官考量。 在14天的短期拘留期间,被告将被监禁,但是会在释放后不留下犯罪记录。 他也必须在一年内,执行130个小时的社区服务,但被告可能提出上诉。 在法庭谕令保密身份下,媒体不可透露31岁受害者的姓名,以及他们的工作场所。 据法庭文件指出,被告于2017年9月之前的数个月,就决定要尝试拍摄裙底视频。 控方副检察官Tan Yanying指出,被告当时曾有一名女友,两人曾有禁止婚前性行为的协议。基于尊重女友,被告遵守有关协议。…

Celebrate National Day – but is this necessary?

At S$3,300 for each billboard, are town councils spending unnecessarily?