Middle East Conflict Drives Up Singapore Energy Prices
Summary
The ongoing Middle East conflict has disrupted global fuel supply chains, causing oil and natural gas prices to increase significantly. As a small city-state, Singapore is highly dependent on energy imports—about 95% of its electricity is produced from imported natural gas, which is also the main feedstock for town gas production. The regulated tariffs for electricity and town gas in Q2 2026 (April-June) will be partially affected, as natural gas prices began climbing only after 28 February 2026. EMA expects further and potentially sharper increases in tariffs in subsequent quarters, with consumers on retail contracts also likely to face higher prices upon renewal.
“The ongoing Middle East conflict has strained global fuel supply chains, causing oil and natural gas prices to increase significantly.”
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GovPing monitors Singapore EMA News for new energy regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 3 changes logged to date.
What changed
EMA issued a media release advising consumers that the ongoing Middle East conflict has strained global fuel supply chains, driving up oil and natural gas prices. Singapore, which imports approximately 95% of its natural gas for electricity and town gas production, will see Q2 2026 tariffs partially affected since fuel prices began rising after 28 February 2026, outside the January-to-mid-March tariff-setting window.
Household and business consumers in Singapore should prepare for higher and more volatile energy costs in the coming quarters as disruptions to Middle East production are expected to sustain elevated fuel prices. Consumers on retail electricity contracts may face higher prices when renewing. EMA has stated it is monitoring the situation and collaborating with industry to ensure supply security.
Archived snapshot
Apr 23, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Middle East Conflict's Impact on Prices of Electricity & Town Gas
31 Mar 2026 Media Releases 31 Mar 2026 Share
The ongoing Middle East conflict has strained global fuel supply chains, causing oil and natural gas prices to increase significantly. As a small city-state, Singapore is highly dependent on energy imports. About 95% of our electricity is produced from imported natural gas, which is also the main feedstock for the production of town gas. An increase in the cost of natural gas would therefore lead to increase in prices of electricity and town gas for all consumers in Singapore.
The regulated electricity and town gas tariffs for each quarter are determined based on the average fuel costs in the first 2.5 months of the preceding quarter. The electricity and town gas tariffs for the April to June period are therefore based on fuel prices from January to mid-March.
Because prices of natural gas had started to climb only after 28 February 2026, the regulated tariffs for electricity and town gas in the second quarter of 2026 have only been partially affected by the rise in fuel prices.
Given the extensive disruptions to oil and natural gas production in the Middle East, fuel prices are expected to remain elevated in the foreseeable future. Consequently, we are likely to see further and potentially sharper increases in the electricity and town gas tariffs in subsequent quarters. Similarly, consumers on electricity retail contracts are likely to also see an increase in prices when renewing their contracts.
EMA is closely monitoring the situation and working closely with the industry to ensure supply security. We cannot predict how long the conflict in the Middle East will last. Household and business consumers must therefore be prepared for higher and more volatile energy costs. Everyone can play a part by using more energy-efficient appliances and conserving energy to reduce energy consumption. This will help lower energy costs and contribute to Singapore's energy resilience.
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