GCIGlobal City Intelligence
Climate Risk

Climate Risk in Singapore

Singapore faces meaningful climate exposure from heat, intense rainfall, and long-run sea-level pressure, balanced by very strong adaptation capacity.

Last updated
2026-05-03
Data year
2025
Module score
65/100

Climate Risk score

Climate exposure, hazard frequency, and adaptation context for floods, heat, storms, and wildfires.

Climate Risk in Singapore65/100

Primary hazard

Heat and rainfall

Heat and intense rainfall are the main day-to-day hazards.

Flood exposure

Moderate

Coastal and flash-flood pressure shape infrastructure investment.

Adaptation capacity

Very strong

Long-horizon climate plans and engineering capacity are world-class.

Singapore climate risk data table

This HTML table mirrors the visible score cards so important comparison data is never trapped in a browser-only chart.

Singapore Climate Risk data table
MetricValueContext
Primary hazardHeat and rainfallSea-level rise informs the long-run plan.
Flood exposureModeratePolders and stormwater design are growing.
Adaptation capacityVery strongImplementation depth raises the score significantly.

Climate Risk city comparison

A crawlable comparison across every indexed city makes it easy to scan how this module changes between metros.

Climate Risk city comparison table
CityScoreSummary
Singapore (this page)65/100Singapore faces meaningful climate exposure from heat, intense rainfall, and long-run sea-level pressure, balanced by very strong adaptation capacity.
Copenhagen78/100Copenhagen carries moderate climate risk centered on coastal flooding and heavy-rain stormwater pressure, with strong adaptation planning.
Berlin75/100Berlin faces moderate climate exposure focused on heat waves, surface-water flooding, and drought-pressure on green infrastructure.
London72/100London faces moderate climate exposure shaped by heat waves, Thames flood scenarios, and urban surface-water flooding.
Paris70/100Paris carries moderate climate risk centered on heat waves and Seine flood pressure, with active adaptation programs.
Toronto70/100Toronto faces rising heat, severe-storm, and wildfire-smoke pressure, balanced by solid adaptation programs.
Sydney65/100Sydney faces meaningful climate exposure from heat, bushfire-smoke, and storm pressure, with improving adaptation programs.
Tokyo64/100Tokyo faces meaningful climate exposure across heat, storm, and seismic-coupled flood pressure, balanced by strong adaptation capacity.
New York60/100New York faces meaningful coastal flood, heat, and storm exposure. Adaptation investment is significant but not yet at parity with the hazard.

Explanation

Climate-risk scoring weighs hazard exposure with adaptation capacity. Singapore's hazards are real, but adaptation depth raises the score.

Read this module with the main city profile because single-topic pages can miss tradeoffs. A city with a high energy score can still have housing pressure, and a city with strong opportunity can still carry health exposure risk.

Sources

These pages use trusted institutional references for methodology and context. Mock values are typed and ready to be replaced by API-backed city datasets without changing route structure.

Continue exploring

These links connect module pages back to city, ranking, and sibling topic paths with crawlable href values.

Energy in Singapore

Clean-energy readiness, grid resilience, and solar or efficiency opportunity signals.

Safety in Singapore

Personal safety, institutional trust, and resilience signals informed by international safety and crime data.

Internet Speed in Singapore

Broadband and mobile connectivity quality, latency, and digital-readiness signals for residents and remote workers.

Overall Intelligence

A balanced ranking of cities across affordability, air quality, clean-energy readiness, and resilience.

Quality of Life

Cities that combine strong services, mobility, safety, clean air, and resilience into a healthy day-to-day profile.