1st Edition

Singapore, the Energy Economy From The First Refinery To The End Of Cheap Oil, 1960-2010

By Weng Hoong Ng Copyright 2012
304 Pages
by Routledge

304 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

304 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Singapore might not have survived the 1960s and prospered thereafter had it not built its economy on the foundations of oil refining, trading and support for oil and gas exploration and production. Cheap oil, sound policies and strong government combined to produce the Singapore economic miracle in its first 50 years of self-rule/independence. With the end of cheap oil, how will Singapore fare... Read more
1. Oil Refining: Launchpad of the Economic Miracle  2. The Regional Oil Trading and Pricing Centre  3. Petrochemical's Wild Ride 4. Upstream, Marine and Offshore  5. Electricity and Power  6. Natural Gas and LNG  7. Bunker and Marine Fuels  8. Sustainable Development: Clean Energy, Climate Change, Energy Efficiency, Smart Grid  9. Conclusion: The Understated Threat 

Biography

Ng Weng Hoong has been a writer and analyst of global resource issues since his undergraduate days in the National University of Singapore in 1978-1981. He started off as a general news reporter in 1982 before branching out to specialize in energy issues in 1986. He has reported on a wide spectrum of issues in the energy sector, including oil, gas, coal, power, marine, renewable energy, climate change and sustainable development. His area of coverage spans Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

 

'Ng argues that modern Singapore became a "success story" with strategic investments in the energy sector. One troubling concern is the implication that the Singapore economic  model could be nearing exhaustion. Ng’s book is must reading for those concerned with the history of oil, development studies, maritime security, and oil trading, as well as general Singaporean history.'

By Benjamin Sovacool, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy