Audrey Tan

Environment editor & journalist with an eye on the climate, oceans & nature in South-east Asia

Singapore, Singapore

About

I supervise coverage of climate and environment issues at The Straits Times. As a journalist, I have a special interest in climate action and nature conservation in South-east Asia; and am trying to know all I can about our oceans and the role of finance in promoting (& stymieing) conservation and climate action.

Experience

  • Assistant News Editor (Environment) at The Straits Times
    Feb 2024 - Present · 2 yrs 5 mos

  • Science Communication and Outreach Lead at NUS Centre for Nature-based Climate Solutions
    Oct 2022 - Feb 2024 · 1 yr 5 mos

  • Science Communication and Outreach Lead at NUS Tropical Marine Science Institute
    Oct 2022 - Feb 2024 · 1 yr 5 mos

  • Advisory Committee Member at Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
    Nov 2019 - Dec 2023 · 4 yrs 2 mos

    Advisory committee member for the Southeast Asia Rainforest Journalism Fund at the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting

  • The Straits Times (9 yrs 4 mos)
    • Assistant News Editor/ Science&Environment Correspondent
      Jan 2022 - Oct 2022 · 10 mos

    • Science & Environment Correspondent
      Jan 2017 - Oct 2022 · 5 yrs 10 mos

      Environment and science correspondent with The Straits Times. Host of ST’s environmental podcast series, Green Pulse, which was officially launched in 2019. Recipient of both the Singapore Press Holdings Undergraduate and Graduate scholarships. I was part of The Straits Times team involved in the six-part Climate of Change feature, the largest journalistic feature undertaken by the paper to date, where correspondents fanned out across the globe to cover climate stories around the world. As part of the series, I covered the Day Zero water crisis in Cape Town, South Africa; and visited Raja Ampat, Indonesia, to document the resilience of coral reefs there against warming sea surface temperatures and bleaching. In July 2018, I also produced an investigative feature on the illegal wildlife trade in South-east Asia, a large hub for endangered animals and their parts. Singapore is a major transshipment hub for these parts, but its role has often been downplayed by the authorities. Following the publication of the feature, Singapore authorities seized three record-breaking shipments of pangolin scales and elephant ivory. To boost science communication on climate phenomena affecting South-east Asia, my colleague Mark Cheong and I traced the footsteps of El Nino across the Pacific Ocean. We documented the impacts of the phenomenon on Indonesia and the Galapagos Islands in this feature.

    • Journalist
      Jul 2013 - Jan 2017 · 3 yrs 7 mos

      I report on and provide analyses of environmental and science issues that affect Singapore and the region.