Breaking News:

Singapore taps Africa’s carbon credits to fuel net-zero ambitions

Oct 10, 2025 Asia News views: 211

While global powers scramble for Africa’s critical minerals,Singapore is quietly charting a different path — targeting the continent’s carbon credits to meet its climate goals and become Asia’s carbon trading hub.


The city-state,constrained by its small size and lack of natural resources,has limited scope to develop large-scale carbon offset projects domestically. Instead,it is turning to Africa for nature-based solutions like forest restoration and clean cookstove initiatives. Each carbon credit — equivalent to one ton of CO₂ avoided or removed — helps Singapore and its regional partners offset emissions they cannot eliminate. Singapore has signed agreements under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement with 24 countries,including six in Africa. Rwanda and Ghana are the most advanced,with over 30 projects under consideration. A recent procurement round awarded contracts for more than 2 million tonnes of high-integrity credits from projects in Ghana,Peru,and Paraguay.


The Singaporean government views these credits as vital to achieving its 2030 Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) and its 2050 net-zero target. Despite investments in solar energy,carbon capture,and a national carbon tax,officials admit decarbonization at home remains limited. “Why we really need Africa as a partner is because of climate change,” said Rahul Ghosh of Enterprise Singapore. “We need a “transference of carbon credits that helps us achieve our carbon goals,” he added. By investing in African carbon sinks,Singapore aims to lead in environmental finance — proving that,amid the global resource race,sustainable trade can offer a different kind of power.

Login

Register

Contribute

United News delivers authoritative global news with African and global insights. Breaking coverage on politics, human rights, environmental crises and social justice. Trusted journalism from Johannesburg to the world.

Politics & Conflicts

Business

Environment

Rights & Justice

United News - unews.co.za