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Summary of Singapore's Water Reuse Guideline or Regulation for Industry

This page is part of the EPA’s REUSExplorer tool, which summarizes the different state level regulations or guidelines for water reuse for a variety of sources and end-uses.
The source water for this summary is Treated Municipal Wastewater.

REUSExplorer Links
  • REUSExplorer home page
  • News in reuse regulations
  • Maps of states with water reuse regulations or guidelines

On this page:

  • Technical basis
  • Water reuse industrial applications approved for use in Singapore
  • Water reuse treatment category for industrial applications
  • Additional context and definitions
  • Water reuse for industrial applications specifications (table)
  • Upcoming regulations
  • References
  • Disclaimer

This page is a summary of the country’s water reuse law or policy and is provided for informational purposes only. Please always refer to the country for the most accurate and updated information.

In Singapore, recycled water is supplied via a separate distribution system to industrial users for non-potable uses. The source of water treated municipal wastewater Treated wastewater effluent discharged from a centralized wastewater treatment plant of any size. Other terms referring to this source of water include domestic wastewater, treated wastewater effluent, reclaimed water, and treated sewage. is specified by the country as treated wastewater. The write-up on this page uses the country’s terms when discussing sources or uses of water that may differ from the Regulations and End-Use Specifications Explorer's (REUSExplorer's) terms.

Technical basis

Singapore allows the use of treated municipal wastewater for non-potable industrial reuse through their advanced treatment process branded “NEWater” (PUB, 2022). The NEWater process generates advanced treated water through three treatment stages: 1) microfiltration/ultrafiltration, 2) reverse osmosis and 3) ultraviolet (UV) disinfection.

NEWater, Singapore’s advanced treated water, is subject to rigorous audit processes annually, conducted by local and international multidisciplinary experts. While not regulated as a drinking water supply, NEWater complies with the Singapore Food Agency’s regulations for drinking water quality according to the 2019 Environmental Public Health Regulations (Water Suitable for Drinking) (Singapore Statutes Online, 2023). NEWater quality is also benchmarked against the 2014 U.S. EPA National Primary Drinking Water Regulations, and the 2022 WHO Guidelines for Drinking Water Quality (WHO, 2022).

Source control, primary and secondary treatment upstream play a key role in the quality of the water received at NEWater treatment plants to minimize fouling of the treatment membranes, and to safeguard the quality of NEWater. For example, Singapore uses online sensors for the detection of volatile organic compounds (VOC) in wastewater networks, as an early warning system of illegal discharges of industrial chemicals, spent oils or solvents. These tools aim to help Singapore’s Public Utilities Board (PUB) – Singapore’s National Water Agency – enforce source control of pollutants (WHO, 2017a). The resulting advanced treated water is then supplied to water-intensive industries for industrial and cooling purposes at semiconductor manufacturing plants, petrochemical plants, industrial parks and commercial buildings. Prior to being distributed or added to reservoirs, NEWater is stored in tanks with a minimum retention time of nine hours to allow sufficient time to respond to contamination or disruptive events while being continuously monitored online (WHO, 2017a).

Both NEWater and potable water in Singapore must meet all applicable requirements for chemical and microbial contaminants stipulated by local and international drinking water standards and guidelines such as the World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines for drinking-water quality (WHO, 2022). Separately, NEWater specifications as they relate to the industrial water users are summarized in the water reuse for industrial applications specifications table. Lastly, NEWater is further tested for other chemical and microbial parameters including pharmaceutical and personal care products, endocrine disrupting compounds, industrial solvents and waterborne pathogens. In total, NEWater is tested for about 300 parameters at frequencies ranging from weekly to annually (PUB, personal communication, November 16, 2023). The technical basis for developing the specifications and/or removal of microbial contaminants, chemicals and other relevant indicators is aligned with international advanced water reuse standards and guidelines such as the WHO potable reuse guidance (WHO, 2017b) but is not otherwise explicitly specified (PUB, personal communication, November 16, 2023).

Water reuse industrial applications approved for use in Singapore

The majority of NEWater is supplied via a separate distribution system to industrial users for non-potable use while a small percentage of NEWater is added to reservoirs where it is mixed with raw water. The percentage of NEWater added to the water reservoirs varies and is increased during dry seasons to bolster water security.

Water reuse treatment category for industrial applications

Singapore does not assign treated municipal wastewater used for industrial applications a category or class of recycled water. The advanced treated water is considered safe to drink.

Additional context and definitions

Singapore has an estimated water demand of 2 million m3/day (PUB, 2023a) and has diversified its water sources by adopting a ‘4 National Taps’ strategy which includes imported water, captured stormwater, NEWater and seawater desalination (WHO, 2017a). NEWater and seawater desalination are intended to serve as a ‘drought-proof’ source of water during prolonged periods of low rainfall. The NEWater factories in Singapore have a supply capacity of 760,000 m3/day, almost 40% of Singapore’s water demand (WHO, 2017a) and are a key part of the water supply strategy to preserves the available potable water supplies for human consumption while ensuring a sustainable supply of recycled water for use by industry. Recycling wastewater endlessly multiplies the available water resources in land scarce Singapore. By 2060, the non-domestic sector is projected to increase from the current 55% to 70% of Singapore’s future water demand, and the capacity of advanced treated water will be expanded to meet up to 55% of this future demand (PUB, 2018).

Water reuse for industrial applications specifications

Summary of Singapore's Advanced Treated Water Specificationsa

Recycled Water Class/Category (Approved Uses) Source Water Type Water Quality Parameter Specificationa Sampling/Monitoring Requirements (Frequency of monitoring; site/ location of sample; quantification methods)b
NEWater – advanced treated water for industrial applications Treated wastewater E. coli <1 CFU/100 mL Not specified
Color <5 Hazen
Conductivity <250 µS/cm
<2 mg/L
Chlorine
pH value 7.0-8.5
Total Dissolved Solids <150 mg/L
Turbidity <5 NTU
Ammonia (as N) <1 mg/L
Aluminum <0.1 mg/L
Barium <0.1 mg/L
Boron <0.5 mg/L
Calcium <20 mg/L
Chloride <20 mg/L
Copper <0.05 mg/L
Fluoride <0.5 mg/L
Iron <0.04 mg/L
Manganese <0.05 mg/L
Nitrate (as N) <5 mg/L
Sodium <20 mg/L
Sulfate <5 mg/L
Silica (as SiO2) <3 mg/L
Strontium <0.1 mg/L
Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs) <0.08 mg/L
Total Organic Carbon <0.5 mg/L
Total Hardness (as CACO3) <50 mg/L
Zinc <0.1 mg/L

Source = PUB (2022) and PUB (2023b)

a These values are provided to the industrial users of NEWater. In addition, NEWater also complies with Singapore’s Environmental Public Health (Water Suitable for Drinking), US EPA’s National Primary and Secondary Drinking Water Regulations under the Safe Drinking Water Act and the 2022 WHO Guidelines for Drinking Water Quality (4th Edition, including the 1st and 2nd addenda).

b Information about sampling and monitoring requirements such as frequency, site and quantification methods not specifically listed in the table was not explicitly specified in Singapore’s regulations.

Upcoming regulations

No upcoming reuse regulations related to treated municipal wastewater reused for industry were found for Singapore.

References:

Geneva: World Health Organization (WHO). 2017a. Potable reuse: Guidance for producing safe drinking-water.

Geneva: World Health Organization (WHO). 2017b. Potable reuse: Guidance for producing safe drinking-water.

Geneva: WHO. 2022. Guidelines for drinking-water quality: fourth edition incorporating the first and second addenda.

Public Utilities Board (PUB), Singapore’s National Water Agency. 2018. Our Water, Our Future.

PUB, Singapore’s National Water Agency. 2022. NEWater.

PUB, Singapore’s National Water Agency. 2023a. Water Conservation.

PUB, Singapore’s National Water Agency. 2023b. PUB NEWater Quality (Typical Values).

Singapore Statutes Online. Environmental Public Health (Water Suitable for Drinking) (No. 2) Regulations 2019. Visited on 11/20/2023:


Disclaimers

Disclaimers

The Regulations and End-Use Specifications Explorer (REUSExplorer) is intended to be a synthesis of state laws and policies governing water reuse across the US for informational purposes only. These summaries are not legally binding and do not replace or modify any state or federal laws. In the case of any conflict between these summaries and a state or federal law, the state or federal law governs. Numeric and other types of water reuse standards and specification regulations are included in these summaries, but not necessarily all relevant state laws. It is possible a state law authorizes types of water reuse, while no reuse standards and/or specification regulations have been adopted.

Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria

References were included if they could be categorized as either an act, standard, regulation, criteria, guideline, guidance document, technical manual, or appendix issued by a government, standards organization (e.g., ISO, NSF/ANSI), professional association (e.g., AWWA, IWA), research sponsor (e.g., WERF, WRF), or expert committee (e.g., National Academies) and considered to be active or adopted. References were excluded if they indicated that a state approved reuse projects on a case-by-case basis only; contained no water quality specifications or requirements; and/or focused on land disposal of both water and biosolids rather than a specific reuse application.

Please contact us at waterreuse@epa.gov if the information on this page needs updating or if this state is updating or planning to update its laws and policies and we have not included that information on the news page.

Contact Us to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
Last updated on February 24, 2025
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