After 6 Years, Singapore Set To Re-enter Amaravati Project

The landslide victory of the TDP-led government has revived hopes of building Amaravati into a capital city of international standards, restoring the confidence of foreign nations to invest in Andhra Pradesh. After six years of staying away from the project, Singapore is preparing to re-enter the state, though in a completely different format, with assurances from the Government of India that there will be no policy reversals this time.

Given its humiliating exit in 2019 when the YSRC came to power, Singapore has pressed for a formal guarantee from the Centre before committing again.

Last month, Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu, his son N. Lokesh, ministers, and MPs visited Singapore to rebuild relations and bring the foreign government back into the capital-building project. A formal announcement of Singapore’s re-entry is expected soon.

In 2019, after Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy’s three-capital proposal, the Singapore consortium tasked with building Amaravati’s seed capital was forced to exit the project. Singapore viewed this abrupt termination as humiliating, and investor confidence in Andhra Pradesh collapsed. However, with the TDP’s return in 2024, Naidu is determined to restore investor trust and revive Amaravati.

Naidu enjoys strong personal ties with the family of Singapore’s former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew. During their recent visit, Naidu ensured that LKY’s son, Lee Hsien Loong, met with Lokesh. Following this, Lokesh published an opinion piece in Business Standard, acknowledging LKY’s influence on his political outlook, suggesting that the partnership is more strategic than transactional. Loong reportedly appreciated the gesture and thanked Lokesh for recognizing his father’s legacy.

Naidu and Lokesh also met Singapore’s Foreign Minister and President. Soon after, the Singapore government posted on LinkedIn that it would re-enter Amaravati in a “different format,” signaling both a diplomatic and economic reset.

What is the Different Format?

This time, Singapore will not directly invest in Amaravati’s seed capital. Instead, the partnership will focus on broader cooperation: urban planning, technology assistance, infrastructure and logistics investments, and major financial commitments across Andhra Pradesh. The AP government has already signed an MoU with Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund, GIC, for investments worth ₹45,000 crore in the state.

To secure central backing, Lokesh briefed External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar in Delhi after the Singapore trip. Reports suggest that the Centre is supportive and a formal announcement may follow soon.

The re-entry of Singapore into Andhra Pradesh would symbolically re-establish Chandrababu Naidu as India’s reformist CM with global influence. Singapore’s insistence on central assurances highlights how foreign investors value institutional continuity over state-level promises. Reviving Amaravati with foreign support could give Naidu a decisive political edge over Jagan Mohan Reddy’s efforts to project Vizag as the state’s executive capital.

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