Singapore Regional Data & Coordination Hub
Singapore does not enforce. Singapore hosts, certifies, and coordinates. Enforcement comes from markets, financiers, and supply chains responding to verified data. As the CED's regional hub for Southeast Asia, Singapore provides neutral governance infrastructure — satellite integration, compliance certification, payment processing, and CSC liaison — without exercising sovereign authority over any nation.
Operational Mandate — Scope Boundary
The distinction between what Singapore does and does not do is a core design feature of the CED. Neutral governance infrastructure cannot simultaneously exercise sovereign authority without creating structural conflicts of interest that would undermine the system's legitimacy.
Why Singapore — Qualification Criteria
Three criteria determine suitability for a CED regional hub: governance neutrality (no territorial forest stake), technical infrastructure (data center, financial, payment capacity), and strategic interest (existential exposure to regional climate disruption). Singapore satisfies all three.
Singapore Pilot — Three-Phase Implementation
The Singapore pilot is an 18-month, S$30–50M full proof of concept. The Liveability Challenge S$1M prize funds Phase 1 monitoring integration — the critical first step from documentation to operational system.
| Phase | Duration | Cost (S$) | Output | Funding |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 — Monitoring Integration | 6 months | S$5–10M | Monitoring platform — 100M+ ha operational | TLC S$1M + co-funding |
| Phase 2 — Payment System | 6 months | S$20–30M | Payment system validated — first CPP disbursed | Singapore Green Finance + bilateral |
| Phase 3 — Market Enforcement | 6 months | S$5–10M | Market enforcement mechanism proven | CSC founding member contributions |
| Total | 18 months | S$30–50M | Complete system proof of concept | Multiple sources |
Scaling Pathway — Singapore to Global
Southeast Asia — Regional Impact Assessment
CED v3.2.1, Appendix E. Singapore's pilot scope covers 165 million hectares with direct climate services dependencies for 572 million people and monsoon-related dependencies for 800+ million.
| Country | CGCI Area (M ha) | Directly Dependent Population | Primary Climate Service | CPP Rate | NIA Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indonesia | 90 | 270 million | Monsoon rainfall, peatland carbon storage | US$650/ha | Provisional |
| Malaysia | 20 | 35 million | Regional rainfall, Singapore water supply | US$650/ha | Provisional |
| Papua New Guinea | 30 | 10 million | Pacific moisture cycling, biodiversity | US$500/ha | Not established |
| Myanmar | 10 | 55 million | Mekong basin regulation, monsoon influence | US$400/ha | Not established |
| Thailand | 5 | 70 million | Regional rainfall, agricultural water | US$400/ha | Not established |
| Cambodia | 5 | 17 million | Mekong basin, Tonle Sap water cycle | US$350/ha | Not established |
| Philippines | 5 | 115 million | Typhoon buffer, island water supply | US$400/ha | Not established |
| SE Asia Total | 165M ha | 572M directly; 800M+ monsoon | 30–50% of regional rainfall generated | — | — |