Article 4. Principles In Law Enforcement
1. Each Party shall be consistent with the principles of transparency, nondiscrimination and procedural fairness in competition law enforcement.
2. Each Party shall apply its competition laws to all entities engaged in commercial activities, subject to exclusions or exemptions provided for under its laws. Such exclusions or exemptions should be transparent and be based on public policy or public interest grounds.
3. Each Party shall apply and enforce its competition laws in a manner, which does not, in like circumstances, discriminate on the basis of nationality.
4. Each Party shall ensure that before it imposes a sanction, or additional restrictive condition or any other remedy, whichever is applicable under the Party’s domestic laws, against any person for violating its competition laws, it affords that person a reasonable opportunity to present opinion or evidence in its defence.
5. Each Party shall provide any person that is subject to the imposition of a sanction, or additional restrictive condition or any other remedy, whichever is applicable under the Party’s domestic laws, for violation of its competition laws, with the opportunity to seek review of the sanction, or additional restrictive condition or any other remedy under that Party's laws.
Article 5. Transparency
1. Each Party shall make public its competition laws, including procedural rules for investigation.
2. Each Party shall ensure that a final decision by a competition authority finding a violation of its competition laws is in writing, and sets out relevant findings of fact and the legal basis for the decision.
3. Each Party shall make public the grounds for any final decision or order to impose a sanction, or additional restrictive condition or any other remedy, whichever is applicable under the Party’s domestic laws, and any appeal therefrom, subject to that Party’s:
(a) (i) domestic laws and regulations;
(ii) need to safeguard confidential information; or
(iii) need to safeguard information on grounds of public policy or public interest; and
(b) redactions of the final decision or order on the grounds in (a)(i) to (iii) above.
Article 6. Cooperation In Law Enforcement
1. The Parties recognise the importance of cooperation and coordination between the respective competition authorities to promote effective competition law enforcement. Accordingly, each Party shall, on a best endeavour basis, cooperate through notification, consultation, exchange of information and technical cooperation.
2. The Parties agree to cooperate in a manner compatible with their respective laws, regulations and important interests, and within their reasonably available resources.
Article 7. Consultation
In order to foster understanding between the Parties, or to address specific matters that arise under this Chapter, a Party shall, on request of the other Party (the “requesting Party”), enter into consultations with the requesting Party. In its request, the requesting Party shall indicate, if relevant, how the matter affects trade or investment between the Parties. The Party addressed shall accord full and sympathetic consideration to the concerns of the requesting Party.
Article 8. Technical Cooperation
The Parties may promote technical cooperation, including exchange of experiences, capacity-building through training programmes, workshops and research collaborations for the purpose of enhancing each Party's capacity related to competition policy and law enforcement.
Article 9. Independence of Competition Law Enforcement
1. Each Party shall ensure independence in decision-making by its authority or authorities in relation to enforcement of competition laws.
2. The obligations under this Chapter shall not prejudice the independence of each Party in enforcing its respective competition laws.
Article 10. Non-Application of Dispute Settlement
Neither Party shall have recourse to Chapter 12 (Dispute Settlement) for any matter arising under this Chapter.
Chapter 17. ENVIRONMENT AND TRADE
Article 1. Context and Objectives
1. Recalling the Stockholm Declaration on the Human Environment of 1972, the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development of 1992, Agenda 21 of 1992, the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation on Sustainable Development of 2002, the Rio+20 Outcome Document “The Future We Want” of 2012, and the Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the Parties acknowledge that economic development, social development and environmental protection are interdependent and mutually supportive components of sustainable development.
2. The Parties reaffirm their commitments to promoting economic development in such a way as to contribute to the objective of sustainable development.
3. The Parties agree that environmental standards should not be used for trade protectionist purposes.
Article 2. Levels of Protection
1. The Parties reaffirm each Party’s sovereign right to establish its own levels of environmental protection and its own environmental development priorities, and adopt or modify its environmental laws and policies.
2. Each Party shall seek to ensure that those laws and policies provide for and encourage high levels of environmental protection, and shall strive to implement these laws and policies effectively. Each Party shall also strive to continue to improve its respective levels of environmental protection.
Article 3. Multilateral Environmental Agreements
1. The Parties recognise that multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) play an important role globally and domestically in protecting the environment. The Parties further recognise that this Chapter can contribute to realising the goals of such agreements.
2. The Parties strive to consult and cooperate as appropriate with respect to MEAs to which both Parties are party, on trade-related environmental issues of mutual interest.
Article 4. Enforcement of Environmental Measures Including Laws and Regulations
1. A Party shall not fail to effectively enforce its environmental measures including laws and regulations, through a sustained or recurring course of action or inaction, in a manner affecting trade or investment between the Parties.
2. The Parties recognise that it is inappropriate to encourage trade or investment by weakening or reducing the protections afforded in its environmental laws, regulations, policies and practices. Accordingly, neither Party shall waive or otherwise derogate from such laws, regulations, policies and practices in a manner that weakens or reduces the protections afforded in those laws, regulations, policies and practices.
3. Nothing in this Chapter shall be construed to empower a Party’s authorities to undertake environmental law enforcement activities in the territory of the other Party.
Article 5. Bilateral Cooperation
Recognising the importance of cooperation on environmental issues in achieving the goals of sustainable development, the Parties commit to implementing cooperation through existing bilateral agreements, such as the Memorandum of Understanding on Environmental Cooperation between the Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources of the Republic of Singapore and the Ministry of Ecology and Environment of the People’s Republic of China signed on 12 November 2018, and to enhancing cooperation in areas of common interest as appropriate.
Article 6. Institutional Arrangement
Each Party shall designate an office within its administration which shall serve as a contact point with the other Party for the purposes of promoting communication for the implementation of this Chapter.
Article 7. Non-Application of Dispute Settlement
Neither Party shall have recourse to Chapter 12 (Dispute Settlement) for any matter arising under this Chapter.
