This is what I think is missing from the answers so far:
If you need one instance of this object per process address space (and you are as confident as you can be that this requirement will not change), you should make it a singleton.
Otherwise, it's not a singleton.
This is a very odd requirement, hardly ever of interest to the user. Processes and address space isolation are an implementation detail. They only impact on the user when they want to stop your application using kill
or Task Manager.
Apart from building a caching system, there aren't that many reasons why you'd be so certain that there should only be on instance of something per process. How about a logging system? Might be better for that to be per-thread or more fine-grained so you can trace the origin of messages more automatically. How about the application's main window? It depends; maybe you'll want all the user's documents to be managed by the same process for some reason, in which case there would be multiple "main windows" in that process.