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Singapore and NZ Sign Deal to Keep Supply Chains Open, Saying They Are Open to Interest from Other Countries

On Monday, the leaders of Singapore signed an agreement with New Zealand to keep their supply chains open in times of crisis. They said they hoped that 'the agreement' would serve as a'model for other countries who want to build a trusted network.

On his recent visit to Singapore, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon saw the signing between his Singaporean counterpart Lawrence Wong and himself. This is at a time when global energy supplies have been 'disrupted' by the Middle East war. Singapore refines a third of the fuel used in New Zealand.

The Agreement on Trade of Essential Supplies was concluded in October, last year during Wong's New Zealand visit before the Middle East conflict broke out. The agreement allows both countries to continue trading a list of agreed-upon goods in times of crisis. This includes fuel, medical, and construction products.

Wong stated that he welcomes other countries to join the new standard. He cited how an earlier partnership between Brunei?Chile?New Zealand?and Singapore?was expanded and became the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal.

Luxon said that he would be happy to receive interest from countries who share his views on the framework of the deal, given the challenges posed by the shift in geopolitics from a world multilaterally governed by rules to one multipolarly dominated by power.

He said that the agreement we just signed, as a first in the world, was a good example of how we could model and remake multilateralism to suit our needs.

(source: Reuters)