Singapore's energy regulator the Energy Market Authority (EMA) has granted conditional approval to Singapore-based Sembcorp Utilities (SCU) to import 1.2GW of low-carbon electricity from Vietnam.
The imported electricity will harness offshore wind power and possibly other forms of power generation, to be developed with engineering services firm PetroVietnam Technical (PTSC), the EMA said on 24 October. The electricity will be transmitted from Vietnam to Singapore through new sub-sea cables that will span around 1,000km.
SCU and PTSC also on 2 October signed a joint development agreement for investment in offshore renewables in Vietnam and export of "green" electricity to Singapore. The two firms will jointly collaborate in investment on offshore wind farms in Singapore with a total capacity of around 2-3GW. This comes after the two countries signed an initial agreement on energy co-operation in October 2022.
The latest conditional approval will help Singapore to meet its goal of importing up to 4GW of low-carbon electricity by 2035. The EMA also previously granted conditional approvals to import 2GW of electricity from Indonesia in September and 1GW from Cambodia in March. If realised, these projects will tap a mix of solar, hydro and wind power.
EMA will continue to explore low-carbon alternatives such as geothermal, hydrogen and technology such as carbon capture and storage. The regulator is also working with various partners on electricity import trials to refine technical and regulatory frameworks, including the Laos-Thailand-Malaysia-Singapore Power Integration Project project importing up to 100MW of renewable hydropower from Laos to Singapore through Thailand and Malaysia.
"Electricity imports are illustrative of how Singapore is tapping on regional power grids to meet energy demand," Singapore's second minister for trade and industry Tan See Leng said at the Singapore International Energy Week conference on 24 October. Cross-border electricity is one of the five "key ingredients" for Singapore to harness clean energy, Tan added, with another being maximising domestic deployment of renewable energy.

