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vip
18-05-16, 22:26
Too much of anything is a waste

May 18, 2016

On a breezy morning, I took a bus to town. The aircon was at full blast as usual even though the bus was only half full. All passengers on board were shivering. Water condensed outside all the windows. It was like driving in a fog. The driver had to keep the wipers on to clear moisture on the windshield.


Too much aircon is a waste

A colleague from Europe commented that “Singapore is a very cold country”. The outside temperature can be 30⁰C to 35⁰C every day. Yet our indoor temperature throughout the year is like outdoors in winters somewhere in Europe. You can’t visit Singapore without packing an extra jacket.

We teach our young children about global warming, energy saving and environmental protection when they are toddlers in kindergarten. Yet our air-conditioning systems are often adjusted to an unnecessarily low temperature everywhere, especially in offices, eateries, shopping malls and public transportation.

Do we need to use aircon to show that we are an affluent country that can afford to waste energy?


Too many plastic bags is a waste

In recent years, shops in many Asian countries have stopped giving out plastic bags to customers. In Kuala Lumpur, the cashier will ask customers whether they already have a carrier for their merchandise. In Hong Kong, shopkeepers have to pay a government levy of 50 cents for every plastic bag they give to customers or face a fine of HK$2,000. Since the law was imposed, plastic bags given out at newsstands were down by 90 percent.

In Singapore, giving away sufficient plastic bags in supermarkets, shops and wet markets is still considered as ‘good customer service’. Many shoppers won’t be shy to ask for spare ones to be used at garbage bags at home.

Plastic bags take many years to decompose. And more plastic bags is offering the convenience for every household to throw away more trash, thus producing more waste.


Too much food is a waste

A large part of the waste that we produce is leftover food – mostly from hotels, restaurants and hawker centres. According to the NEA, Singaporeans waste 790,000 tonnes of food in a year. This is equivalent to everyone throwing away two bowls of food every day.

This translates to a hefty US$1.4 billion worth of food being wasted by 5.54 million people in Singapore. In other parts of the world, 795 million people are starving with insufficient food.


Too many unoccupied flats is a waste

Ku Swee Yong, CEO of Century 21 Singapore, pointed out that between 2011 and 2015, the total stock of Singapore’s residential units has increased by 150,000. Over the next four years up to the year 2019, another 155,000 residential units will be completed. The stock is enough to cater to population growth in the next ten years and enough for home supply for up to 2030.

Data released by Urban Redevelopment Authority on Monday showed that sales of new private homes fell 11.6 per cent last month despite more new projects being launched. We now have a total of 24,919 vacant units in the market.

There are close to 20 EC projects being launched since 2014. In Punggol alone, there are already 8 ECs but developers are adding 2 more in the crowded market.

Despite monthly household income threshold being raised from S$12,000 to S$14,000 last August, according to Knight Frank, 40 to 50 percent of ECs launched in the past two years remain unsold. A new EC project may be over-subscribed with many e-applications. Yet the actual take-up rate can be very low. According to URA, the vacancy rate of completed EC units now stands at 14.3 percent.


Too many condo projects is a waste

After Singapore emerged from global financial crisis in 2009, the long period of vibrant sales in private properties has led to a massive boom in construction in Singapore. For more than five years, the government released new residential sites incessantly while the developers continued to build new projects unrelentingly. When the two forces become unstoppable, overbuilding is inevitable.

Since the en bloc fever in 2007, many old low-rise buildings haven been pulled down to make way for new high-rise condominium projects. The choice of demolition over refurbishment creates unnecessary waste in construction.

The East Coast used to have the blue sky, lush greenery and open view. A drive along Marine Parade Road these days can no longer see the big tall trees but countless new condominium projects. At night, many projects only have a handful of lights on.

With or without occupation, new flats start depreciation the moment they obtain their TOP. With close to 25,000 unoccupied units and another 53,512 in the pipeline, how many building materials, foreign labors and investment dollars we have wasted in this building craze?

Kelonguni
18-05-16, 23:56
Too much money don't know where to park also quite wasteful leh.

One important criteria is what / who we are building so much for. I am sure Govt is keeping an eye on those figures.

Arcachon
19-05-16, 05:25
http://www.bloomberg.com/quicktake/negative-interest-rates

Negative Interest Rates

http://www.cnbc.com/2016/04/07/negative-rates-not-hurting-banks-ecb.html

Negative rates not hurting banks: ECB

teddybear
19-05-16, 08:19
Actually I don't think the plastic bag is a waste.
Firstly, plastic bags have recyclable ones, which is green.
Secondly, the plastic bags serve as trash bag for rubbish bins, which are immersely useful (and we recycled them)!
The problem arises when businesses don't give recyclable plastic bags and when people don't make full use of them as recyclable trash bags then will cause plastic bags to be wasteful........


Too much of anything is a waste

May 18, 2016

On a breezy morning, I took a bus to town. The aircon was at full blast as usual even though the bus was only half full. All passengers on board were shivering. Water condensed outside all the windows. It was like driving in a fog. The driver had to keep the wipers on to clear moisture on the windshield.


Too much aircon is a waste

A colleague from Europe commented that “Singapore is a very cold country”. The outside temperature can be 30⁰C to 35⁰C every day. Yet our indoor temperature throughout the year is like outdoors in winters somewhere in Europe. You can’t visit Singapore without packing an extra jacket.

We teach our young children about global warming, energy saving and environmental protection when they are toddlers in kindergarten. Yet our air-conditioning systems are often adjusted to an unnecessarily low temperature everywhere, especially in offices, eateries, shopping malls and public transportation.

Do we need to use aircon to show that we are an affluent country that can afford to waste energy?


Too many plastic bags is a waste

In recent years, shops in many Asian countries have stopped giving out plastic bags to customers. In Kuala Lumpur, the cashier will ask customers whether they already have a carrier for their merchandise. In Hong Kong, shopkeepers have to pay a government levy of 50 cents for every plastic bag they give to customers or face a fine of HK$2,000. Since the law was imposed, plastic bags given out at newsstands were down by 90 percent.

In Singapore, giving away sufficient plastic bags in supermarkets, shops and wet markets is still considered as ‘good customer service’. Many shoppers won’t be shy to ask for spare ones to be used at garbage bags at home.

Plastic bags take many years to decompose. And more plastic bags is offering the convenience for every household to throw away more trash, thus producing more waste.


Too much food is a waste

A large part of the waste that we produce is leftover food – mostly from hotels, restaurants and hawker centres. According to the NEA, Singaporeans waste 790,000 tonnes of food in a year. This is equivalent to everyone throwing away two bowls of food every day.

This translates to a hefty US$1.4 billion worth of food being wasted by 5.54 million people in Singapore. In other parts of the world, 795 million people are starving with insufficient food.


Too many unoccupied flats is a waste

Ku Swee Yong, CEO of Century 21 Singapore, pointed out that between 2011 and 2015, the total stock of Singapore’s residential units has increased by 150,000. Over the next four years up to the year 2019, another 155,000 residential units will be completed. The stock is enough to cater to population growth in the next ten years and enough for home supply for up to 2030.

Data released by Urban Redevelopment Authority on Monday showed that sales of new private homes fell 11.6 per cent last month despite more new projects being launched. We now have a total of 24,919 vacant units in the market.

There are close to 20 EC projects being launched since 2014. In Punggol alone, there are already 8 ECs but developers are adding 2 more in the crowded market.

Despite monthly household income threshold being raised from S$12,000 to S$14,000 last August, according to Knight Frank, 40 to 50 percent of ECs launched in the past two years remain unsold. A new EC project may be over-subscribed with many e-applications. Yet the actual take-up rate can be very low. According to URA, the vacancy rate of completed EC units now stands at 14.3 percent.


Too many condo projects is a waste

After Singapore emerged from global financial crisis in 2009, the long period of vibrant sales in private properties has led to a massive boom in construction in Singapore. For more than five years, the government released new residential sites incessantly while the developers continued to build new projects unrelentingly. When the two forces become unstoppable, overbuilding is inevitable.

Since the en bloc fever in 2007, many old low-rise buildings haven been pulled down to make way for new high-rise condominium projects. The choice of demolition over refurbishment creates unnecessary waste in construction.

The East Coast used to have the blue sky, lush greenery and open view. A drive along Marine Parade Road these days can no longer see the big tall trees but countless new condominium projects. At night, many projects only have a handful of lights on.

With or without occupation, new flats start depreciation the moment they obtain their TOP. With close to 25,000 unoccupied units and another 53,512 in the pipeline, how many building materials, foreign labors and investment dollars we have wasted in this building craze?

Ilikeu
19-05-16, 09:01
Got aircon in bus, complain

Got plastic bag to use, complain

Got food to eat, complain

Got more flats to choose from and buy, complain

Got more private condo to upgrade or buy, complain

Typical troll.




Too much of anything is a waste

May 18, 2016

On a breezy morning, I took a bus to town. The aircon was at full blast as usual even though the bus was only half full. All passengers on board were shivering. Water condensed outside all the windows. It was like driving in a fog. The driver had to keep the wipers on to clear moisture on the windshield.


Too much aircon is a waste

A colleague from Europe commented that “Singapore is a very cold country”. The outside temperature can be 30⁰C to 35⁰C every day. Yet our indoor temperature throughout the year is like outdoors in winters somewhere in Europe. You can’t visit Singapore without packing an extra jacket.

We teach our young children about global warming, energy saving and environmental protection when they are toddlers in kindergarten. Yet our air-conditioning systems are often adjusted to an unnecessarily low temperature everywhere, especially in offices, eateries, shopping malls and public transportation.

Do we need to use aircon to show that we are an affluent country that can afford to waste energy?


Too many plastic bags is a waste

In recent years, shops in many Asian countries have stopped giving out plastic bags to customers. In Kuala Lumpur, the cashier will ask customers whether they already have a carrier for their merchandise. In Hong Kong, shopkeepers have to pay a government levy of 50 cents for every plastic bag they give to customers or face a fine of HK$2,000. Since the law was imposed, plastic bags given out at newsstands were down by 90 percent.

In Singapore, giving away sufficient plastic bags in supermarkets, shops and wet markets is still considered as ‘good customer service’. Many shoppers won’t be shy to ask for spare ones to be used at garbage bags at home.

Plastic bags take many years to decompose. And more plastic bags is offering the convenience for every household to throw away more trash, thus producing more waste.


Too much food is a waste

A large part of the waste that we produce is leftover food – mostly from hotels, restaurants and hawker centres. According to the NEA, Singaporeans waste 790,000 tonnes of food in a year. This is equivalent to everyone throwing away two bowls of food every day.

This translates to a hefty US$1.4 billion worth of food being wasted by 5.54 million people in Singapore. In other parts of the world, 795 million people are starving with insufficient food.


Too many unoccupied flats is a waste

Ku Swee Yong, CEO of Century 21 Singapore, pointed out that between 2011 and 2015, the total stock of Singapore’s residential units has increased by 150,000. Over the next four years up to the year 2019, another 155,000 residential units will be completed. The stock is enough to cater to population growth in the next ten years and enough for home supply for up to 2030.

Data released by Urban Redevelopment Authority on Monday showed that sales of new private homes fell 11.6 per cent last month despite more new projects being launched. We now have a total of 24,919 vacant units in the market.

There are close to 20 EC projects being launched since 2014. In Punggol alone, there are already 8 ECs but developers are adding 2 more in the crowded market.

Despite monthly household income threshold being raised from S$12,000 to S$14,000 last August, according to Knight Frank, 40 to 50 percent of ECs launched in the past two years remain unsold. A new EC project may be over-subscribed with many e-applications. Yet the actual take-up rate can be very low. According to URA, the vacancy rate of completed EC units now stands at 14.3 percent.


Too many condo projects is a waste

After Singapore emerged from global financial crisis in 2009, the long period of vibrant sales in private properties has led to a massive boom in construction in Singapore. For more than five years, the government released new residential sites incessantly while the developers continued to build new projects unrelentingly. When the two forces become unstoppable, overbuilding is inevitable.

Since the en bloc fever in 2007, many old low-rise buildings haven been pulled down to make way for new high-rise condominium projects. The choice of demolition over refurbishment creates unnecessary waste in construction.

The East Coast used to have the blue sky, lush greenery and open view. A drive along Marine Parade Road these days can no longer see the big tall trees but countless new condominium projects. At night, many projects only have a handful of lights on.

With or without occupation, new flats start depreciation the moment they obtain their TOP. With close to 25,000 unoccupied units and another 53,512 in the pipeline, how many building materials, foreign labors and investment dollars we have wasted in this building craze?

Kelonguni
19-05-16, 09:27
Must give people a chance lah...

The success of future seminars depends on how much the property market drops. Only if the drop is significant (much more than all those new taxes) then she can buy in again and dong dong qiang tell people what and how to buy and when to sell.

This kind of market everybody fumbles and stumbles.




Got aircon in bus, complain

Got plastic bag to use, complain

Got food to eat, complain

Got more flats to choose from and buy, complain

Got more private condo to upgrade or buy, complain

Typical troll.

martialsin
19-05-16, 12:00
dong dong qiang also must have substance mah

Kelonguni
19-05-16, 12:43
Have lah. Her ability to connect apparently unconnected stuff is incredible.

In any case, I find the efforts to clear development sites, plant trees, plant grass, sell sites, cut down or clear trees and grassland , then build, quite wasteful.

Why not just sell a barren site?


dong dong qiang also must have substance mah

teddybear
19-05-16, 13:29
Got air-con in bus, it is free? Commuters have to pay for it right? So why need to make temperature so cold? If bus company subsidize for free then I don't think anybody would care............

Got food to eat, so much left over, why they waste it and throw any instead of giving to the needy and charity?
Got friends used to involve in Charity but now don't do it anymore. Ask why and the reply is too much dark secret, most donated money don't end up going to the needy people (which they are supposed to). Well well, not new to me, now then they realize??? :fatigue:
And heard some like BreadTalk just paste over a new "used by" date and sell like fresh product?




Got aircon in bus, complain

Got plastic bag to use, complain

Got food to eat, complain

Got more flats to choose from and buy, complain

Got more private condo to upgrade or buy, complain

Typical troll.

Ilikeu
19-05-16, 15:18
And heard some like BreadTalk just paste over a new "used by" date and sell like fresh product?

trolling again in forums....

teddybear
19-05-16, 19:00
Stating some facts that had been reported in Newspapers which BreadTalk reportedly admitted but clarified to be a mistake 2-3 times already is called "trolling" by you?
And how about pouring soya milk from Yeo Hian Seng bottle and labelling as "fresh soya milk" for sale by BreakTalk staffs as reported in Stomp?
Now We sure know your standard....... :sour:


trolling again in forums....

Ilikeu
19-05-16, 19:26
Stating some facts that had been reported in Newspapers which BreadTalk reportedly admitted but clarified to be a mistake 2-3 times already is called "trolling" by you?
And how about pouring soya milk from Yeo Hian Seng bottle and labelling as "fresh soya milk" for sale by BreakTalk staffs as reported in Stomp?
Now We sure know your standard....... :sour:

Looks like you do not really know the meaning of trolling....