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SG as an entreport and trading hub is fucked

LITTLEREDDOT

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
[h=1]The canal that will sink S’pore’s maritime-trade dominance is one step closer to fruition[/h][FONT=open_sansregular]May 18, 2015[/FONT]
[FONT=open_sansregular]The Kra Canal may become a reality in Thailand with China helping with the construction bill.[/FONT]
[FONT=open_sansregular] Jonathan Lim




18


[/FONT]
[FONT=open_sansregular]For the uninitiated, the canal in question is Thailand’s Kra Isthmus Canal, or simply known as the Kra Canal.
Unlike the Suez Canal depicted in the photograph above, the Kra Canal does not exist yet. For centuries (yes, centuries), the Thais have been mulling about the possibility of building a deep-water canal cutting through Thailand’s long peninsula to link the Indian Ocean with the South China Sea.
If the Kra Canal is built, it will cut the journey between the Indian Ocean and South China Sea by up to 1,200 km:
Kra-Canal.jpg
Source: PicsoraMOC between China and Thailand for the construction of Kra Canal signed
Hong Kong news outlet Wen Wei Po reported on 17 May that China and Thailand have signed a Memorandum of Cooperation on the development of the Kra Canal.
If nothing falls through, Kra Canal could be a reality in 10 years at the cost of US$210 billion. If nuclear and other technologies are used in the construction, the timeline could be shortened to 7 years but at a cost of US$360 billion.
According to the report, the Kra Canal would be 102 km long, 400 m wide and 20 m deep. It would shorten the journey between the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean by 1,200 km. Moving 100,000 tonnes worth of cargo through the canal will shorten the journey two to five days and save approximately US$350,000 in fuel cost.
Who benefits from all this?
Shipping and logistics companies would definitely welcome the lowered costs of moving goods between East Asia and Europe. A shorter trip without going through the Straits of Malacca would also reduce the risk of running into pirates.
Thailand would benefit from toll collection, port fees and a range of developments surrounding the canal.
China’s involvement in this MOC is noteworthy. For centuries, the idea of building the Kra Canal rested solely on the Thais. In fact, the British signed an agreement with Thailand in the 1800s to prevent the construction of the canal to preserve Singapore’s dominance as the region’s go-to harbour.
So why has China come to partake in this endeavour?
crude_oil_imports_source.png
Source: US EIAAccording to the United States Energy Information Administration, China’s oil consumption outstrips its own oil production. It relies on importing crude oil to sustain itself. As shown in the diagram above, a bulk of the crude oil comes from the Middle East and Africa.
This oil has to travel through the Straits of Malacca, via Singapore, before it reaches China. Cutting the cost of this oil coming to China would have a positive impact for China.
Additionally with the US Navy having a base in the Philippines and making occasional stops at Singapore, it is a strategic consideration for the Chinese Navy to have a sea route to India which is further away from the disputed waters in the South China Sea. Currently, ships would sail through the South China Sea closer to Borneo, the disputed Spratly Islands and the Philippines. If the Kra Canal opens, ships would take a route closer to Vietnam instead.
With the bulk of maritime traffic being diverted from Singapore, the ports of Shanghai, Hong Kong, Shenzhen all stand to gain too.
Where is Singapore in all of this?
It would be foolish to think that Singapore will not be impacted negatively. It is more a matter of softening the blow than avoiding it.
In the spirit of not putting all its eggs in one basket, Singapore has moved from an economy which depended heavily on its ports for GDP to one which is diversified away from relying on it:
singapore-2014-gdp.jpg
Statistics from SingStatIn 2014, Singapore’s transportation and storage sector accounted for 6.9% of Singapore’s GDP. It moved 581 million tonnes of sea cargo or approximately 34 million containers. This would be directly reduced the day Kra Canal opens for business.
There is one reason ships will still want to make a call at Singapore’s ports – it is a safe and secure place to refine the world’s black gold. According to some reports, ExxonMobil’s refinery in Jurong Island is the seventh largest oil refinery in the world, while Bukom is the largest wholly-owned Shell refinery globally in terms of crude distillation capacity (500,000 barrels per day).
But that could change as well.
With the looming possibility of the Kra Canal being completed within the first half of the 21st century, as well as, the possibility of the opening of the Arctic Northern Sea route with the help of icebreakers, Singapore will find itself in a maritime pinch.
The question is, what will Singapore’s next move be?
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xpo2015

Alfrescian
Loyal
No worries mate.

More than half the population are immigrants. They sure will think of some new business for SGP to survive!

Immigrants are resilient people.
 

xebay11

Alfrescian
Loyal
Entreport trade?? No big deal long time ago! If global warming melts the Antartic ice caps, we r fucked anyway

Without the Entreport hub, manufacturing and petro chemicals would go along with it, and Singapore would have nothing left. Only left to be casino hub.
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
No worries mate.

More than half the population are immigrants. They sure will think of some new business for SGP to survive!

Immigrants are resilient people.

Let's see... loansharking, gambling, prostitution?

I think even tuition services will be worthless... no need to study so hard, FTs get the jobs anyway. Save the money and take your kids for a holiday, Sinkie parents. :wink:
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Was Sinkieland's pre-LKY era that glamorous anyway? It's just a trading outpost of Raffles and his Freemason buddies of the East Indian Company.
 

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
Now why didn't our "far sighted" and "visionary" leaders approach the Thais to strike up a partnership? Instead of letting the Chinese get into it. Talk of this canal went back a long way. I guess Temasek prefers money losing ventures, like the one with SinCorp. The revenues collected from this canal would've helped mitigate loses.
 

theblackhole

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
this is not the end of Singapore

it is the beginning of a new era

a new golden age to come

don't write off Singapore just because
of the Kra...
 

tonychat

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
I just feel joy over the news and happy that sinkie ball-less shits are fucked soon.. Karma isn't that much of a bitch.
 

theblackhole

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Singapore will survive despite everything
it will continue to prosper despite all the fartup tonychats here
Singapore will surge forward with confidence and prosperity
majulah singapura!!!
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
under LKY nothing works except 'what's wrong with collecting money' like a gangster, COE type issue papers only make cars nothing.

this is bad karma for 60.1% keep voting for PAP.



Now why didn't our "far sighted" and "visionary" leaders approach the Thais to strike up a partnership? Instead of letting the Chinese get into it. Talk of this canal went back a long way. I guess Temasek prefers money losing ventures, like the one with SinCorp. The revenues collected from this canal would've helped mitigate loses.
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Callin the Brit to revive and monopolized the drug trade again in SEA. Brit says the Chinese are born and bred for opium.


New Markets
As China tightened her borders, Britain pinned her hopes on her other Asian colonies. Opium production in the Straits Settlements (Singapore, Penang, Malacca, Labuan) rose from 353,938 pounds in 1916 to 370,688 pounds in 1920, in spite of Britain’s promise at the Hague Convention to limit opium sales. In 1918, 60% of Britain’s Asian income was derived from opium sales. In 1925, opium accounted for 48% of Singapore’s revenue, and 100% of North Borneo’s. At the 1923 Opium Conference, Mr. Campbell admitted that the British Indian government was determined to maintain high levels of both internal consumption and export, and that they,

“controlled the production, distribution, sale, possession – every possible practical question which could arise in connection with opium—in the strictest possible manner—They had built up a complicated and highly efficient administrative system which started from the time the poppy seed was put into the ground, and did not relinquish control of the drug until it was in the hands of the consumers, or till it was actually exported.”

Some wits noted wryly that the Crown did all but light the addicts’ pipes.

When Indians begged Britain to abandon the opium policy, Britain responded that her opium monopoly was a humanitarian service to India (as it had been to China), and that to end the trade would be “a mockery; to many millions it would be sheer inhumanity.”


Born and Bred to the Opium Pipe
Westerners had long held the vast, ancient kingdom of Cathay in awe, but by the end of the Opium Wars, Chinese were beneath contempt, mere creatures born and bred to the opium pipe. It is ever thus, for gross atrocities, whether in China or Auschwitz or South Africa or Nicaragua or the antebellum South, can be sustained only by dehumanizing our prey and by canonizing ourselves. Britain argued that not only did the Chinese want opium but that their physical constitution required it, and that the British opium monopolies throughout Asia were a humanitarian service for the Chinese.

this is not the end of Singapore

it is the beginning of a new era

a new golden age to come

don't write off Singapore just because
of the Kra...
 
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