How Singapore’s ‘sewage beer’ could help water conservation efforts


This recording was made using enhanced software.

Full story

Singapore promoted the invention of a Singaporean beer made from treated wastewater and jokingly referred to it as “sewage beer” at the United Nations Climate Change Conference that runs from Monday, Nov. 11, to Friday, Nov. 22, in the hopes it will inspire more water conservation. It’s part of Singapore’s national campaign to conserve water on an island nation of 6 million people where there are no natural water sources.

The water scarcity has forced the country to become a world leader in water management and innovations.

QR code for SAN app download

Download the SAN app today to stay up-to-date with Unbiased. Straight Facts™.

Point phone camera here

Ong Tze-Ch’in, chief executive of the Public Utilities Board in Singapore, said, “Our commitment is to recycle every drop of used water that we could get our hands on and to convert as much as we can to new water.”

“I think this for us, this is a source of water that is cheaper and much more accessible than desalination, and so we intend to maximize that as far as we can,” He added.

Singapore’s national efforts to conserve water also include catchment, desalination, recycling and water imports from Malaysia.

Climatologists warn as water resources become scarcer, more innovations like recycling wastewater, may be needed.

NEWBrew was reportedly invented in 2018, and attendees at the climate talks had a chance to try the beverage.

Ignace Mbouamboua, a Congo delegation member, said, “As long as they can make it clean, you know, when you drink this beer, you don’t feel that it comes from wastewater and all those things. But you know, that’s ok. If we can do something interesting with the water that is already used, that’s ok. You know, instead of just leaving it like that way.”

Tags: , , , , , ,

Straight Arrow
Fear No Fact.

Don't just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

Straight Arrow
Fear No Fact.

Don't just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

14 total sources

Key points from the Left

No summary available because of a lack of coverage.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Right

No summary available because of a lack of coverage.

Report an issue with this summary

  • No coverage from Lean Right sources 0 sources
  • No coverage from Right sources 0 sources
  • No coverage from Far Right sources 0 sources

Powered by Ground News™