Transport in Singapore

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Singapore is linked to Johor, Malaysia via a causeway and bridge, as well as a railway line operated by the KTMB of Malaysia. The Singapore Changi Airport, comprising two terminals and one of the most important air hubs in the region, is situated at the eastern most tip of the main island, and serves 167 cities in 53 countries. When construction of the third terminal is completed in 2006, Changi will be capable of handling 64 million passengers every year.2

Within Singapore, there is a well-developed system of expressways and public transport roads. Prominent expressways include the Pan Island Expressway (PIE), the Central Expressway (CTE), the East Coast Parkway (ECP).

In addition, Singapore has a Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) and Light Rapid Transit (LRT) train system consisting of five lines. There is also a well-worked system of bus routes throughout the island, most of which have air conditioning due to Singapore's yearlong sweltering heat. Buses without air conditioning will be gradually phased out. A contactless smartcard (EZ-link) is used to pay bus and subway fares.

The Port of Singapore, run by port operators PSA International (formerly the Port of Singapore Authority) and Jurong Port, is the world's busiest in terms of shipping tonnage handled. 1.04 billion gross tons (GT) were handled in the year 2004, crossing the one billion mark for the first time in Singapore’s maritime history. Singapore also emerged as the top port in terms of cargo tonnage handled with 393 million tonnes of cargo in the same year, pipping the port in Rotterdam for the first time in the process.

Singapore is ranked second globally in terms of containerised traffic, with 21.3 million Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units (TEUs) handled in 2004., and retains her position as the World's busiest hub for transhipment traffic. She is also the world's biggest bunkering hub, with 23.6 million tonnes sold in 2004.

Contents

Air transport

Singapore aims to be Asia's aviation hub chiefly via the promotion of liberal aviation policies in a bid to encourage airlines to commence and to maintain operations here. The aviation industry is regulated by the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore, a statutory board of the Singapore government under the Ministry of Transport.

Airlines

Airports

Singapore Changi Airport is a regional aviation hub served by 64 international airlines and is being expanded with the construction of a third terminal slated for completion in 2006.

Airports: 9 (1999 est.)

Airports - with paved runways:
total: 9
over 3,047 m: 2
2,438 to 3,047 m: 1
1,524 to 2,437 m: 4
914 to 1,523 m: 1
under 914 m: 1 (1999 est.)

Heliports: 1 (1999 est.)

Airport and airbase technical data
Airport ICAO IATA Usage Runway Length
(ft)
Length
(m)
Remarks
Paya Lebar AirbaseWSAPQPGMilitaryPaved124003800 mFormer civilian
Seletar AirportWSSLXSPCivilianPaved53001615Non-scheduled flights
Sembawang AirbaseWSAGMilitaryPaved3000914
Singapore Changi AirportWSSSSINCivilianPaved13200975
Tengah AirbaseWSATTGAMilitaryPaved89002713

Land transport

Cars

Total population: 405,798

Buses

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Sbsfleet.JPG
Fleet of SBS Transit buses parked at Boon Lay Interchange.

SBS Transit

  • Routes: 185 (133 trunk, 52 feeder)
  • Fleet: 2,582
  • Daily trips: 2.34 million passenger trips

SMRT Corporation

  • Routes: 76 (57 trunk, 19 feeder)
  • Fleet: 813
  • Daily Trips: 661,595 passenger trips

Taxies

Total fleet: 19,007

All fitted with meters; all air conditioned; about 90% of taxis have radiophones; call booking is done via GPS or digital voice despatch

Daily trips: about 588,632

Cable car

The Singapore cable car provides a scenic route between Mount Faber on the main island of Singapore and the resort island of Sentosa.

Rail

Railways: 38.6 km, narrow gauge, 1.000 m. The island rail's terminal at Tanjong Pagar Railway Station is linked to the Malaysian rail network KTM across the 1.2 km causeway to Johor Bahru on the Malaysian mainland. It connects with Kuala Lumpur and Bangkok.

There is a 109 km standard gauge urban heavy rail system known as the Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) with 67 stations. There are three main lines running at present: the North South Line, the East West Line (both operated by SMRT Corporation), and the North East Line (operated by SBS Transit). A new Circle Line is slated for completion in 2010 and will be opened in phases as the various stations are ready.

In 1998, a 7.8 km Light Rapid Transit (LRT) system with 14 stations was introduced in Bukit Panjang. The Sengkang LRT Line, a 10.7 km light rail line was opened in 2003; a third LRT line, Punggol LRT Line, was opened in 2005 Jan with the East Loop of the system serving the residence in Punggol.

Roads

Singapore pioneered the modern use of toll roads to enter the most congested city area with the Singapore Area Licensing Scheme, which has since been replaced with the Electronic Road Pricing, a form of electronic toll collection.

The island's bus and taxi services are very cheap compared to those of other countries and are heavily subsidised by the government.

Roads:

  • Total length of expressways: 150 km
  • Total length of major arterial roads: 575 km
  • Total length of collector roads: 405 km
  • Total length of local access roads: 2014 km
  • Total road length: 3144 km

Traffic drives on the left.

Singapore has two land links to Malaysia. The Causeway, built in the 1920s to connect Johor Bahru (Johor, Malaysia) to Woodlands in Singapore, carries a road and a railway line whereas the Tuas Second Link, a bridge further west, was completed in 1996 and links Tuas in Singapore to Tanjung Kupang in Johor (Malaysia).

Sea transport

The Port of Singapore, overseen by the Maritime And Port Authority Of Singapore and run by port operators PSA International (formerly the Port of Singapore Authority) and Jurong Port, is the world's busiest in terms of shipping tonnage handled. 1.04 billion gross tons (GT) were handled in the year 2004, crossing the one billion mark for the first time in Singapore’s maritime history. Singapore also emerged as the top port in terms of cargo tonnage handled with 393 million tonnes of cargo in the same year, pipping the port in Rotterdam for the first time in the process.

Singapore is ranked second globally in terms of containerised traffic, with 21.3 million Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units (TEUs) handled in 2004., and retains her position as the World's busiest hub for transhipment traffic. She is also the world's biggest bunkering hub, with 23.6 million tonnes sold in 2004.

Ports and harbors: Singapore

Merchant marine:
total: 900 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 23,065,290 GRT/36,393,317 DWT
ships by type: bulk 136, cargo 84, chemical tanker 96, combination bulk 4, combination ore/oil 8, container 186, liquefied gas 41, livestock carrier 3, multi-functional large load carrier 2, petroleum tanker 290, refrigerated cargo 2, roll on/roll off 5, short-sea/passenger 1, specialized tanker 10, vehicle carrier 32
foreign-owned: Australia 6, China 15, Denmark 32, Germany 18, Greece 12, Hong Kong 31, India 3, Indonesia 33, Japan 58, South Korea 13, Malaysia 31, Monaco 19, Norway 53, Papua New Guinea 1, Philippines 9, Russia 2, Slovenia 1, Sweden 12, Switzerland 5, Taiwan 44, Tanzania 1, Thailand 16, United Kingdom 15, United States 1
registered in other countries: 383 (2003 est.)
note: a flag of convenience registry; includes ships from 22 countries among which are Japan 41, Denmark 35, Sweden 28, Thailand 28, Hong Kong 26, Germany 19, Taiwan 19, and Indonesia 11 (1998 est.)

PSA Singapore's Container facilities includes:

  • Container berths: 37
  • Quay length: 10,314 m
  • Area: 3.39 km²
  • Max draft: 15 m
  • Quay cranes: 112
  • Designed capacity: 20,000 kTEU

Five new berths at Pasir Panjang Container Terminal is now under construction, and the resulting figures will stand at:

  • Container berths: 42
  • Quay length: 12,014 m
  • Area: 4.02 km²
  • Maximum draft: 15 m
  • Quay cranes: 132
  • Designed capacity: 24,000 kTEU

Jurong Port's facilities include:

  • Berths: 23
  • Berth length: 4,545 m
  • Maximum vessel draft: 16 m
  • Maximum vessel size: 150,000 dwt
  • Area: 1.2 km² (Free Trade Zone), 320,000 m² (non-Free Trade Zone)
  • Warehouse facilities: 280,000 m²
Ports and Harbours Data
Port Operator Type Berths Quay length
(m)
Quay cranes Area
(m²)
Capacity (kTEUs)
Brani (BT)PSAContainer9
Cosco-PSA (CPT)Cosco/PSAContainer2720228,000>1 million
JurongJTCMulti-Purpose234,5471,520,000
Keppel (KT)PSAContainer14
Pasir Panjang (PPT)PSAContainer9
Pasir Panjang WharvesPSAGeneral
SembawangPSAGeneral
Tanjong Pagar (TPT)PSAContainer8

See also

External links

Template:Expressways of Singapore

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