Is Open Burning Legal in Singapore After the 2026 Policy Reforms?

No, open burning is illegal in Singapore under the Environmental Protection and Management Act (EPMA), enforced by the National Environment Agency (NEA). Exceptions exist only for controlled agricultural or land-clearing fires with prior NEA approval, but these are rare and tightly scrutinized under the 2026 Green Plan’s stricter air quality standards.

Key Regulations for Open Burning in Singapore

  • Prohibition under EPMA: Section 24 of the EPMA explicitly bans open burning, with penalties up to S$20,000 and/or imprisonment for repeat offenders. The NEA actively monitors hotspots via satellite and ground patrols.
  • Agricultural/land-clearing exemptions: Only permitted with NEA’s written consent, subject to wind conditions, firebreaks, and real-time air quality indices. Non-compliance triggers immediate enforcement action.
  • 2026 compliance shifts: The NEA’s upcoming Air Quality Improvement Plan tightens enforcement, including mandatory use of biomass boilers for waste-to-energy plants and stricter penalties for haze-linked burning.

Violations are prosecuted under the Environmental Public Health Act for nuisance fires, while transboundary haze incidents may invoke the Transboundary Haze Pollution Act, imposing fines up to S$100,000 per day. Businesses and individuals must adhere to the Code of Practice on Open Burning, which outlines alternative waste disposal methods like incineration or recycling.