Singapore, 5 June 2018 – Today, in conjunction with World Environment Day, Dr Amy Khor, Senior Minister of State, Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources, launched the Singapore series of the UN Environment’s #BeatPlasticPollution Campaign at Marina Barrage. Through this initiative organised by City Developments Limited (CDL) and Global Initiatives, Singapore, which designated 2018 as its Year of Climate Action, joins 11 other Asia-Pacific cities¹ that have created recycled plastic art installations for the UN Environment’s campaign.
“Beat Plastic Pollution” is also the theme for World Environment Day 2018. Globally, 13 million tonnes of plastic enter the ocean every year, threatening marine and human life while destroying natural ecosystems.² In Singapore, about 700 million kilogrammes of plastic waste are discarded annually but less than 10% of it is recycled.³
To date, CDL and Global Initiatives have rallied 30 like-minded partners from the Private, Public and People (3P) sectors to create three art installations and raise awareness of how plastic pollution affects health, nature and wildlife. The largest of the three installations, Mori, is a massive 120-metre long caterpillar which will be made from some 18,000 plastic bottles and displayed at Marina Barrage. Mori aims to enter the Singapore Book of Records for the largest number of plastic bottles used in an outdoor art installation.
When completed, the caterpillar sculpture will blossom into a chain of colourful plastic flowers, signifying a waste-to-beauty metamorphosis. Designed by professional architects Mr Kenneth Koh Qibao (age 35) and Mr Brandon Lim Jing Hong (age 30), the sculpture is also a wall for visitors to pledge their commitment to reduce plastic waste and they can share this on social media using the #BeatPlasticPollution and #ClimateActionSG hashtags.