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

SINGAPORE, May 4 (Reuters) – The leaders of ⁠Singapore ⁠and New Zealand signed ⁠an agreement to keep their supply chains open during ​times of crisis on Monday, and said they hoped the agreement would ‌be a model for ‌other countries to create a network of trusted partners.

Prime Minister ⁠Christopher Luxon ⁠witnessed the signing with his Singaporean counterpart, Lawrence Wong, on ​his visit to Singapore, which comes as global energy supplies are disrupted by the war in the Middle East. A third of New Zealand’s ​fuel is refined in Singapore.

The Agreement on Trade in Essential Supplies ⁠was concluded ⁠during Wong’s visit to ⁠New ​Zealand in October last year, before the Middle East conflict broke out. ​The agreement ensures ⁠both countries can continue to trade an agreed list of goods during times of crisis, including fuel, medical and construction-related products.

Wong said that he would welcome other countries in the region coming on ⁠board with the new standard, pointing to how an earlier partnership ⁠involving Brunei, Chile, New Zealand, and Singapore was expanded and eventually became the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal.

Luxon said he would welcome interest in the framework of the deal from like-minded countries, given the challenges of the geopolitical shift from a multilateral world guided by rules to a multipolar one driven by power.

“The agreement that we’ve ⁠just signed today, as a world first, is actually a good example of how we can model out and remake the case for multilateralism in the way we want to as ​well,” he said.

(Reporting by Jun Yuan Yong and ​Lucy Craymer; Editing by John Mair)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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