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Under these agreements Singapore built two water treatment plants in Singapore and a new, expanded pipeline from Johor. [21] Singapore also supplied treated water to Johor far below the cost of treating the water. At the time of the agreements it was expected that Singapore would become part of Malaysia, as it did for a brief period beginning ...
Water in Singapore is polluted by unwanted materials contributed by industrial facilities, coupled by oil from both incoming and outgoing trading vessels. [8] Corrective measures are taken, and affected water is taken for treatment at specialised centres. [6] Plants such as NEWater treat unwanted water into drinkable water. [9]
PUB, Singapore's National Water Agency, commonly known as PUB, an acronym for Public Utilities Board, is a statutory board under the Ministry of Sustainability and the Environment of the Government of Singapore responsible for ensuring a sustainable and efficient water supply in Singapore.
The water is potable quality and can be added to drinking water supply reservoirs where it is withdrawn and treated again in conventional water treatment plants before being distributed to consumers. However, most NEWater is currently used for non-drinking purposes, mostly by industries with production requirements for high purity water.
The reservoir provides water supply to the eastern regions of Singapore and stores treated water mainly from Bedok Reservoir. It can reportedly hold 22 million gallons/ 100,000 cubic metres of water. [8] Access to this service reservoir is restricted unlike the neighbouring Bedok Reservoir.
Boustead Singapore Limited (SGX: F9D) is an engineering services group listed on the Singapore Exchange and headquartered in Singapore. The group's engineering divisions specialise in energy-related engineering, water & wastewater engineering and industrial real estate solutions.
The company started initially as Hydrochem (S) Pte Ltd in 1989 [3] with a start-up capital of S$20,000 and three staff, selling water treatment systems. [4] [5]By January 2001, Hyflux had become the first water treatment company to be listed on SESDAQ, and was upgraded to the Singapore Exchange's Mainboard in April 2003.
The DART Amphibious Vehicle (DAV) enhances SCDF's response to fire and rescue incidents in Singapore's inland and coastal waters. Operated by a four-men crew, the DAV is able to achieve speeds of up to 100 km/h on land and up to 25 knots in water via its twin water jet propulsion system.