logo
Jeffrey Siow addresses COE system, private-hire cars, ERP 2.0 and EV plans in Singapore

Jeffrey Siow addresses COE system, private-hire cars, ERP 2.0 and EV plans in Singapore

Economic Times16 hours ago

Acting Transport Minister Jeffrey Siow discusses Singapore's COE system, ERP 2.0 rollout, private-hire vehicle policies, and EV adoption at a media interview on June 11, 2025
Synopsis Acting Transport Minister Jeffrey Siow stated that no major changes to Singapore's COE system are expected in the short term. He also discussed private-hire vehicle impacts, the ERP 2.0 rollout, electric vehicle adoption, and late-night transport access. This article summarizes key points on transport policy and urban mobility in Singapore Acting Transport Minister Jeffrey Siow confirmed that the Singapore government will not implement significant changes to the certificate of entitlement (COE) system in the near term. He emphasized that the current focus is on completing the installation of on-board units (OBUs) in all vehicles as part of the ERP 2.0 transition.
ADVERTISEMENT 'The reality is there won't be space for every Singaporean to own a car in Singapore,' Siow said during a media interview on June 11. He explained that the COE system remains a method to allocate a limited and valuable resource, vehicle ownership, within a land-scarce city-state.
Also read: Singapore announces six public holiday long weekends for 2026
On the question of usage-based charging, Siow stated that this may be considered in a future phase of the ERP 2.0 rollout. The system was introduced to replace the aging ERP infrastructure, which had become unsustainable due to unavailable parts.As of June 2025, over 500,000 vehicles in Singapore have been equipped with OBUs. The government aims to complete installation across the country's vehicle fleet, totaling approximately one million, by 2026.Responding to concerns that private-hire vehicles may be inflating COE prices, Siow challenged that narrative. He pointed out that these services provide pay-per-use access to private transport, potentially reducing the demand for individual car ownership.
ADVERTISEMENT 'If we didn't have private-hire cars today, actually the reverse would be true, that a large number of these people will feel that they need to buy a car, and then... they will bid the price of the COE up,' Siow said.He added that private-hire cars offer more efficient use of COEs. 'If you had one COE left to allocate, is it better to allocate it to a private car owner, who then drives maybe two trips a day and leaves the car in the garage? Or is it better to share the car among a much larger group of Singaporeans who can have access to the use of a car when they need it? Surely it must be the latter, right?'
ADVERTISEMENT Also read: Top insolvency lawyer and former Rajah & Tann managing partner Patrick Ang dies at 61However, Siow indicated that if driving behaviors shift significantly over time, the COE allocation model could be reviewed accordingly.Siow also addressed questions regarding work hours for private-hire drivers following the recent death of 49-year-old driver Gavin Neo, who reportedly worked up to 15 hours daily. Siow noted that the Land Transport Authority (LTA) does not currently regulate the hours private-hire drivers spend on the road.
ADVERTISEMENT He added that the unions have not requested regulations on driver hours, citing individual flexibility. Siow said that LTA would consider intervention if accident rates involving private-hire vehicles exceeded those involving private vehicles, which has not been the case.The Workplace Safety and Health Council recommends limiting driver shifts to no more than 12 hours. Siow further commented on ride-hailing company Grab's incentive structures, suggesting they may merit closer review.
ADVERTISEMENT 'I have a lot of sympathy for (Mr Neo)... The union has reached out to (the family), and we want to see how we can help the family in that particular instance,' he said.
Siow identified electric vehicles (EVs) as a 'game changer' for urban planning. Because EVs are quiet and non-polluting, roads can be designed closer to or even through buildings. The government has announced that all new car registrations must be cleaner-energy models from 2030.
Also read: Trade Tensions & Tariffs: Will Singapore enter a technical recession? 'It is a matter of managing the transition,' Siow said. 'It just takes time for people to switch. We don't want to force them to suddenly have to give up their vehicle for a new one.'On late-night public transport, Siow cited manpower limitations as the main constraint. 'Between choosing to deploy a night bus versus choosing to deploy a new bus service, I have to weigh which is the more immediate priority,' he said.
For MRT services, nightly maintenance work limits the feasibility of extending service hours. However, the completion of the Circle Line loop between HarbourFront and Marina Bay may allow partial overnight maintenance while maintaining network connectivity. Siow stated that the current operational pressures are leaning more toward reducing service hours to accommodate maintenance needs rather than extending them.
(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)
(Catch all the US News, UK News, Canada News, International Breaking News Events, and Latest News Updates on The Economic Times.)
Download The Economic Times News App to get Daily International News Updates.
NEXT STORY

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chinese AI developers fly hard drives abroad to sidestep US chip curbs: WSJ report
Chinese AI developers fly hard drives abroad to sidestep US chip curbs: WSJ report

Economic Times

time4 hours ago

  • Economic Times

Chinese AI developers fly hard drives abroad to sidestep US chip curbs: WSJ report

TIL Creatives Suitcases overflow with hard drives, their metallic surfaces gleaming under a single light source. A clandestine data operation unfolds. Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) companies are physically moving data outside the country as a workaround to the US curbs hindering access to advanced semiconductors, according to a Wall Street Journal 2022, the US has tightened restrictions on the sale of advanced AI chips and tech to China over national security concerns. While some use domestic chips as substitutes, others smuggle US-made hardware through third countries, though this has become harder due to increased US pressure. Chinese AI developers are now employing a new tactic of moving their data abroad to places like Southeast Asia and the Middle East, allowing them to access American AI chips outside strategies challenge the limits of US export controls. There exist layers of intermediaries between US tech and their Chinese users, making it difficult to ascertain if US laws are being its final days, the Biden administration proposed country-specific chip purchase caps to prevent countries like Malaysia from supplying China. These caps would have required overseas buyers to accept national security terms, potentially banning Chinese access. However, in May, the Trump administration dropped the plan, citing the regulatory burden on US firms like Nvidia. Instead, it warned companies to ensure their products aren't used to train Chinese AI models. At a Chinese AI company, executing the "Malaysia plan" took months of preparation, people involved in the process told WSJ. Engineers physically fly hard drives containing massive data sets into Malaysia, as transferring the massive data sets over the internet could take months. Before the trip, they spent over eight weeks optimising the data and fine-tuning the AI training program, knowing updates would be difficult once the data left company had previously used the same Malaysian data centre in July, operating through a Singaporean subsidiary. But as Nvidia and its vendors increased scrutiny of AI chip end users, the Malaysian data centre asked the Chinese firm to switch to a local Malaysian entity to avoid company then registered a Malaysian business in Kuala Lumpur, listing three local citizens as directors and an offshore holding firm as the parent company, corporate records avoid drawing attention at customs, engineers split the hard drives across four suitcases, unlike the previous year when they packed everything into one. They recently returned to China with several hundred gigabytes of results, including model parameters from the AI training, WSJ cumbersome, this approach allowed them to avoid importing AI hardware into China, which has become increasingly risky due to tightening controls across Southeast Asia. In February, Singaporean authorities accused three individuals of falsely declaring the destination of Nvidia servers worth millions. While Singapore doesn't enforce foreign export laws, officials stated they won't tolerate misuse of the country to sidestep such centres are rapidly emerging across Southeast Asia. Real estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle estimates that Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, and Indonesia collectively have nearly 2,000 megawatts of data centre capacity, comparable to the combined capacity of London and Frankfurt, the largest data centre hubs in Europe. In March and April alone, Malaysia imported $3.4 billion worth of AI chips and other processors from Taiwan—exceeding the country's total imports of such chips for all of 2024, according to Taiwan's International Trade facilities cater to both Western and Chinese clients. Earlier this year, a Beijing-based tech firm took over a lease for 200 AI servers that a data centre in Malaysia had originally earmarked for an American cloud-computing company, people familiar with the arrangement told WSJ. Meanwhile, as the Middle East becomes a hub of AI investments from the US, courtesy of agreements signed during President Donald Trump's visit to the region, it could become the hotbed of Chinese activity.

Chinese AI developers fly hard drives abroad to sidestep US chip curbs: WSJ report
Chinese AI developers fly hard drives abroad to sidestep US chip curbs: WSJ report

Time of India

time6 hours ago

  • Time of India

Chinese AI developers fly hard drives abroad to sidestep US chip curbs: WSJ report

Such moves challenge the limits of US export controls. The layers of intermediaries between US tech and their Chinese users make it difficult to ascertain if US laws are being broken. Meanwhile, Middle East could become another hub for Chinese AI developers looking to access US chips. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) companies are physically moving data outside the country as a workaround to the US curbs hindering access to advanced semiconductors , according to a Wall Street Journal 2022, the US has tightened restrictions on the sale of advanced AI chips and tech to China over national security concerns. While some use domestic chips as substitutes, others smuggle US-made hardware through third countries, though this has become harder due to increased US pressure. Chinese AI developers are now employing a new tactic of moving their data abroad to places like Southeast Asia and the Middle East, allowing them to access American AI chips outside strategies challenge the limits of US export controls. There exist layers of intermediaries between US tech and their Chinese users, making it difficult to ascertain if US laws are being its final days, the Biden administration proposed country-specific chip purchase caps to prevent countries like Malaysia from supplying China. These caps would have required overseas buyers to accept national security terms, potentially banning Chinese in May, the Trump administration dropped the plan, citing the regulatory burden on US firms like Nvidia . Instead, it warned companies to ensure their products aren't used to train Chinese AI a Chinese AI company, executing the "Malaysia plan" took months of preparation, people involved in the process told WSJ. Engineers physically fly hard drives containing massive data sets into Malaysia, as transferring the massive data sets over the internet could take months. Before the trip, they spent over eight weeks optimising the data and fine-tuning the AI training program, knowing updates would be difficult once the data left company had previously used the same Malaysian data centre in July, operating through a Singaporean subsidiary. But as Nvidia and its vendors increased scrutiny of AI chip end users, the Malaysian data centre asked the Chinese firm to switch to a local Malaysian entity to avoid company then registered a Malaysian business in Kuala Lumpur, listing three local citizens as directors and an offshore holding firm as the parent company, corporate records avoid drawing attention at customs, engineers split the hard drives across four suitcases, unlike the previous year when they packed everything into one. They recently returned to China with several hundred gigabytes of results, including model parameters from the AI training, WSJ cumbersome, this approach allowed them to avoid importing AI hardware into China, which has become increasingly risky due to tightening controls across Southeast Asia. In February, Singaporean authorities accused three individuals of falsely declaring the destination of Nvidia servers worth millions. While Singapore doesn't enforce foreign export laws, officials stated they won't tolerate misuse of the country to sidestep such centres are rapidly emerging across Southeast Asia. Real estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle estimates that Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, and Indonesia collectively have nearly 2,000 megawatts of data centre capacity, comparable to the combined capacity of London and Frankfurt, the largest data centre hubs in Europe. In March and April alone, Malaysia imported $3.4 billion worth of AI chips and other processors from Taiwan—exceeding the country's total imports of such chips for all of 2024, according to Taiwan's International Trade facilities cater to both Western and Chinese clients. Earlier this year, a Beijing-based tech firm took over a lease for 200 AI servers that a data centre in Malaysia had originally earmarked for an American cloud-computing company, people familiar with the arrangement told as the Middle East becomes a hub of AI investments from the US , courtesy of agreements signed during President Donald Trump's visit to the region, it could become the hotbed of Chinese activity.

Salernitana food poisoning forces rescheduling of Samp play-off
Salernitana food poisoning forces rescheduling of Samp play-off

Hindustan Times

time8 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

Salernitana food poisoning forces rescheduling of Samp play-off

A severe bout of food poisoning has forced Sampdoria's relegation decider with Salernitana to be rescheduled for this coming Sunday, Serie B said on Tuesday. Eight Salernitana players were hospitalised in the early hours of Monday morning after 21 people from the club's playing and training staff fell ill during the return flight to Salerno following their 2-0 loss at Sampdoria in the first leg of the two-sides' relegation play-off. Salernitana asked for the second leg in Salerno, originally scheduled for Friday night, to be pushed back to help players recover. And Italy's second division said in a statement that the game would now kick off at 2030 local time on Sunday. Italian media report police had visited the hotel where Salernitana players stayed ahead of the first leg and which prepared the team's in-flight meal for the journey to Salerno. Sampdoria were relegated to the third tier for the first time in their history last month, only to be saved by a points deduction for Brescia which bumped the 1991 Italian champions into one of the division's two relegation play-off positions. Brescia, who replaced Sampdoria in the last of three automatic relegation places, did not appeal the deduction and are set to go out of existence after 114 years following owner Massimo Cellino's decision not to honour a debt of three million euros . One of seven Italian clubs who have played all their football in the top two divisions, Sampdoria were relegated to Serie B in 2023. They were close to going bust before being saved by current president Matteo Manfredi and former Leeds United owner Andrea Radrizzani, who has since exited the club. The club's current majority shareholder is Singaporean businessman Joseph Tey. Club icons Alberico Evani and Attilio Lombardo were hired as coaches in April in an attempt to save Sampdoria from the drop after significant transfer market activity both last summer and in January. Evani is Sampdoria's fourth head coach of the season after Andrea Pirlo, Andrea Sottil and Leonardo Semplice. td/pi

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store