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Singapore

Requisition of Resources (No. 6) Order 2025

Overview of the Requisition of Resources (No. 6) Order 2025, Singapore sl.

Statute Details

  • Title: Requisition of Resources (No. 6) Order 2025
  • Act Code: RRA1985-S785-2025
  • Legislation Type: Subsidiary Legislation (SL)
  • Authorising Act: Requisition of Resources Act 1985
  • Enacting Authority: Minister for Defence
  • Citation: SL 785/2025
  • Date of Making: 29 September 2025
  • Commencement / Date of Requisition: Provisions of Part 3 of the Act to come into and remain in operation on 10 December 2025
  • Status: Current version as at 27 March 2026

What Is This Legislation About?

The Requisition of Resources (No. 6) Order 2025 is a Singapore subsidiary legislation instrument made under the Requisition of Resources Act 1985 (“RRA”). In practical terms, it is an administrative legal mechanism that activates—on a specified date—the operational provisions in Part 3 of the Act. Those provisions relate to the State’s power to requisition (that is, take or secure) resources when required for national needs, typically in circumstances connected to defence and security planning.

Although the Order itself is brief, its legal effect can be significant. By bringing Part 3 of the Act into force for a defined period (“to come into and remain in operation on 10 December 2025”), the Order triggers the statutory framework that authorises the Government to require resources from relevant persons or entities. For lawyers, the key point is that the Order does not create a new requisition regime from scratch; rather, it turns on an existing statutory part of the Act at a particular time.

In plain language, the Order tells the legal system: “From 10 December 2025, the rules in Part 3 of the Requisition of Resources Act 1985 apply.” This is consistent with how Singapore often uses orders to activate or schedule operational provisions of a broader enabling statute. The “(No. 6)” indicates that this is the sixth such requisition order in a series, reflecting that activation may occur multiple times depending on planning needs.

What Are the Key Provisions?

1. Citation (Section 1)
Section 1 provides the formal name of the instrument: the “Requisition of Resources (No. 6) Order 2025.” This is standard legislative drafting, but it matters for citation in legal documents, correspondence, and any subsequent enforcement or compliance steps.

2. Date of requisition / Activation of Part 3 (Section 2)
Section 2 is the operative provision. It states that “the provisions of Part 3 of the Act are to come into and remain in operation on 10 December 2025.” This language is crucial: it indicates not only the commencement date but also that Part 3 is intended to remain operative (at least for the duration contemplated by the Act and the requisition framework). The Order therefore functions as a temporal trigger for the Act’s requisition powers.

3. Enacting formula and enabling power
The enacting formula states that the Minister for Defence makes the Order “in exercise of the powers conferred by section 2 of the Requisition of Resources Act 1985.” For practitioners, this is a reminder that the Minister’s authority is grounded in the Act itself. When advising clients, one should therefore read the Order together with the enabling provision in the RRA—particularly to understand the scope of discretion, procedural requirements, and any limits on how and when Part 3 may be activated.

4. “Made on” date and administrative significance
The Order is “made on 29 September 2025,” but it activates Part 3 on 10 December 2025. This gap is legally meaningful. It provides a window for affected parties to prepare for the legal consequences of Part 3 coming into force. In disputes, the “made on” date may also be relevant to questions about publication, internal approvals, and whether the instrument was properly executed in accordance with the Act and subsidiary legislation requirements.

How Is This Legislation Structured?

This instrument is structured in a conventional two-section format typical of activation orders. It contains:

(a) Section 1 (Citation): identifies the Order by name.

(b) Section 2 (Date of requisition): specifies the date on which Part 3 of the Requisition of Resources Act 1985 comes into and remains in operation.

Beyond these sections, the remainder of the document is largely formal: status information, timeline/versioning metadata, and the enacting formula. The substantive regulatory content—what requisition means, who may be required to provide resources, the process for requisition notices, compensation (if any), and enforcement—will be found in Part 3 of the Requisition of Resources Act 1985, not in the Order itself.

Who Does This Legislation Apply To?

The Order applies indirectly to persons and entities that fall within the scope of Part 3 of the Requisition of Resources Act 1985 once that Part is activated. While the extract provided does not reproduce Part 3’s definitions and operative mechanisms, the structure of such legislation indicates that the relevant “affected persons” are those who control, supply, or are otherwise associated with “resources” that the State may need for defence-related or national purposes.

Practically, this often includes businesses and operators in sectors that may be relevant to resource mobilisation—such as logistics, manufacturing, utilities, transport, and other supply chains—depending on how “resources” is defined in the Act. Lawyers should therefore treat the Order as a triggering instrument and conduct a careful review of the Act’s Part 3 to identify: (i) the categories of resources; (ii) the categories of persons who may be requisitioned; (iii) the procedural steps (notices, directions, or orders); and (iv) any rights of objection, review, or compensation.

Why Is This Legislation Important?

Even though the Requisition of Resources (No. 6) Order 2025 is short, it can have real operational and legal consequences. Once Part 3 of the RRA is in force, the Government may be empowered to require resources from relevant parties. For counsel, the importance lies in the need to anticipate compliance obligations, manage contractual and operational impacts, and advise on risk allocation.

From an enforcement perspective, activation orders like this one are often the legal “switch” that enables subsequent actions. Businesses may face requisition notices, directions, or other administrative steps that require immediate operational responses. Failure to comply—depending on the enforcement provisions in Part 3 and the Act generally—could expose parties to legal liability, including penalties or other consequences.

From a transactional perspective, the Order may also affect how clients should interpret force majeure clauses, government intervention provisions, and supply obligations. While the Order itself does not address compensation or contractual relief, those issues are typically addressed in the underlying Act. Therefore, practitioners should not treat the Order as a standalone instrument; rather, it should be read alongside the RRA’s Part 3 to determine what protections exist (for example, whether compensation is payable, how it is calculated, and what procedural safeguards apply).

Finally, the “current version as at 27 March 2026” and the timeline reference to “09 Dec 2025” and “SL 785/2025” underscore a practical point for legal research: subsidiary legislation may be amended, consolidated, or reissued. Lawyers should ensure they rely on the correct version and confirm whether any amendments affect the activation date, scope, or interpretation.

  • Requisition of Resources Act 1985 (including, in particular, Part 3 and section 2—the enabling provision for making orders)
  • Legislation Timeline / Revisions (for confirming the correct version of SL 785/2025 as at the relevant date)

Source Documents

This article provides an overview of the Requisition of Resources (No. 6) Order 2025 for legal research and educational purposes. It does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult the official text for authoritative provisions.

Written by Sushant Shukla

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