SINGAPORE – A study to protect the industry-heavy south-west of Singapore from sea-level rise is expected to start later in 2026, with consultants set to recommend if coastal barriers can be built between the mainland and Jurong Island.
The 116km coastline study from Tuas to Pasir Panjang will be national water agency PUB’s largest coastal study to date. It is expected to take six years to develop solutions to prevent coastal and inland floods, said Mr Ridzuan Ismail, director of PUB’s flood resilience planning department.
In a tender by the national water agency published in end-March, it was revealed that the Pasir Panjang Terminal area, to be vacated by the 2040s, may be redeveloped, with potential reclamation and works on the surrounding water body.
The appointed consultant will have to help PUB decide between large-scale, government-owned shields that can protect most of the coastline and localised measures managed by each coastal land owner.
Large-scale measures include coastal barriers – arm-like gates or dams designed to keep out the rising seas and storm surges, which are higher-than-usual tides caused by storms brewing offshore.
The south-west is the heart of Singapore’s industrial and shipping sector, home to Tuas Port, Jurong Industrial Estate, Jurong Fishery Port and recreation spots like West Coast Park.
Singapore’s shipping and port operations are also set to be consolidated in Tuas Port in the coming decades.
Singapore’s average sea level is projected to rise by up to 1.15m by 2100. If high tides and extreme events like storm surges occur, sea levels could rise by 5m.
Assistant Professor Yuzhu Pearl Li, chair of the climate change technical committee at the Institution of Engineers, Singapore, noted that the south-west coast is more complex than a typical urban shoreline. It combines major port activity, waterfront industries, critical infrastructure, coastal drains and waterways like the Pandan and Jurong rivers that open to the sea.
“Its risks are therefore not just from sea-level rise alone, but from the interaction of storm tide, rainfall, inland drainage backflow, ship wakes, wind waves and maritime operations,” she noted. Ship wakes refer to the V-shaped trail of waves and turbulent water that tails behind a moving vessel. Such waves have contributed to the erosion of Pulau Ubin’s northern coastline.
The consultant has to assess ship wakes and determine the combined wave effects to support the engineering design of the proposed coastal protection measures, stated the tender documents on government procurement portal GeBIZ.
PUB divides Singapore’s coastline into eight segments to study them more closely and develop tailored solutions. The stretch from Lim Chu Kang to Woodlands and Jurong Island are currently being studied, while the study for Sentosa will start later in 2026. The studies for the south-eastern coast and the stretch between Tuas Checkpoint and Lim Chu Kang were completed in 2025.
The south-eastern coast stretches from Pasir Panjang Ferry Terminal to Changi, and solutions recommended include installing arm-like coastal barriers, raising shoreline slopes and constructing bunds on Changi Beach.
An artist’s impression of a possible coastal barrier between Sentosa and Pulau Brani.



