
Dear PM - Please Make Up Your Mind on Coal! As a "custodian for future generations", please Do Not Waver!
Popularity: 14% [?]

Dear PM - Please Make Up Your Mind on Coal! As a "custodian for future generations", please Do Not Waver!
Popularity: 14% [?]

PM Najib: Sabah, please Accept Dirty Coal
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Sunday, November 08, 2009
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http://www.dailyexpress.com.my/news.cfm?NewsID=68713
Kota Kinabalu: Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak said there is need for some sacrifices to be made in order to achieve development and something good, particularly in addressing the power woes in Sabah.
He said he made the decision to have the proposed coal-fired power plant project to be re-located to Felda Sahabat Felda in Lahad Datu since the project had been rejected by other districts in the State.
“First, it was to be built in Lahad Datu but the people there objected and then moved to Sandakan but the people there also objected so lastly in my capacity as the Minister of Felda I decided to build it in a Felda area. Its okay,” he said.
[Blog note: So, the people of Felda are less important than those in Lahad Datu and Sandakan?? This statement proves that the PM KNOWS FULLY WELL about the fierce objections of Sabahans, then WHY still push it down our throats??]
According to him, the Federal Government was committed in addressing the power woes in Sabah and he had even directed the Energy Minister, Datuk Peter Chin, to ensure the problem in Sabah is addressed by next year.
[Blog note: If the Federal Government is 'committed', then the Federal Government should NOT EXPORT our Kimanis Gas to Sarawak (but let Sabah use it for electricity), and should NOT channel Bakun's hydro-power all the way to West Malaysia, Brunei or Indonesia (but export it to Sabah, which is much, much closer)!!]
However, he said that despite the dire need of power supply, the move to set up the power plant was objected just because it is using coal to generate power.
“But, if not we won’t have any power. Our people must decide you want power at the same time you don’t want the power plant. You want the plant somewhere else, not in your own backyard.
[Blog note: The PM must have been misinformed. The people of Sabah WANT power plants - but we just DON'T want coal (or nuclear, mind you)!! How is that difficult to understand, dear PM?]
“So this is our problem we have wasted much time pushing it around,” he said, adding that in order to achieve something good there is a need for all to make some sacrifices.
“We have to accept what is good and we have to be realistic. If we understand and are willing to sacrifice we will achieve higher level of development for Sabah,” he said.
[Blog note: But dear PM, coal is NOT GOOD, but is "dirty, not environmentally friendly"!!]
Launching the Parti Bersatu Sabah (PBS) 24th Congress at Magellan Sutera, Saturday, Najib assured that the Federal Government was also committed in helping Sabah address the illegal immigrant problem.
But, he said the Government’s effort was futile if the locals themselves continue to employ paperless foreigners to get cheap labour.
Whatever it is, Najib assured that the Government would not let down and that action would be taken so that Sabah would no longer be bogged by the problems of illegal immigrants.
PBS President Datuk Seri Joseph Pairin Kitingan had earlier in his welcoming speech suggested that the Government set a deadline i.e year 2012 for the problem to be comprehensively resolved in Sabah
[Yeah, but WHY do we have to sacrifice if we HAVE ALTERNATIVES, such as Kimanis Gas which is being exported by the Federal Government to Sarawak, and Bakun hydro from Sarawak which is being exported to Brunei, Indonesia and West Malaysia via undersea cable?? And why do we have to IMPORT "dirty, environmentally not friendly" coal from Indonesia??
Is this 'sacrifice' fair to Sabahans?? Why doesn't the Federal Government asks Sarawak to 'sacrifice' by giving up OUR Kimanis Gas, or asks the West Malaysians, Bruneians and Indonesians to 'sacrifice' by giving up Bakun hydro-power, and TNB to 'sacrifice' some of their profits by using safer and cleaner energy sources, so that SABAH can use them for electricity??
Is this the way BN rewards its 'Fixed Deposit', 'Blue' State like Sabah??!!].
Popularity: 12% [?]

Najib: "Coal is what we call DIRTY technology, it's NOT environmentally friendly"
http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/index.php/malaysia/41958-pm-says-country-over-dependent-on-ipps
By Syed Jaymal ZahiidKUALA LUMPUR, Oct 31 — Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak admitted today that the government needs to revise its energy policy, calling the current one obsolete and in need of a revamp.
In his keynote address at electricity utility TNB’s 60th anniversary celebration here, he said the current policy was proven to be costly, both environmentally and financially.
Heavy dependence on independent power producers (IPPs) and costly natural resources like natural gas have taken its toll on the government financially while cheaper options like coal is damaging to the environment, said the prime minister.
“I don’t like the current energy policy. It’s not right,” he told some 1,500 TNB workers attending the event.
“We are overly dependent on the IPPs and expensive resources like natural gas to produce energy and coal is what we call DIRTY technology, it’s NOT environmentally friendly,” he added.
Relations between IPPs and the government have not been good in recent years.
Many leaders from both sides of the political spectrum are calling for the government to be firm with the IPPs which they claimed have been stepping on its toes by providing energy at high prices.
While Najib today said the government should stop depending on the IPPs, he did not mention how the government planned to do so.
Later at a press conference, Najib said the government had begun embarking on a new energy policy that he claims would be focusing more on cost-effective resources.
As revealed in Najib’s maiden Budget recently, the prime minister told the media that his administration had started studying sectors like renewable energy and green technology to replace the current policy.
“It’s not a short-term solution, it’s a long one but we need to make the first step,” he said.
Popularity: 8% [?]

Global Warming - Coal is the main culprit
OCT 26 – Asia’s rebound from the global economic slump is cheering the world. But the revival is bad news for the environment because it is largely driven by a production system addicted to fossil fuels.
This helps explain why it is proving so difficult for international climate change negotiators to bridge the gulf that divides developed and developing countries.
It also helps explain why China and India, despite tensions over territorial and water disputes, agreed last week to work together to resist binding cuts or caps to their greenhouse gas emissions. The International Energy Agency (IEA) calculates that around 65 per cent of these emissions worldwide come from energy use or production.
The economic crisis has had a significant impact on the energy sector. The IEA reported earlier this month that investment in polluting technologies had been deferred and emissions of carbon dioxide could fall this year by as much as 3 per cent – steeper than at any time in the last 40 years.
“This gives us a chance to make real progress towards a clean-energy future,” said IEA executive director Nobuo Tanaka. But, he added, “only if the right policies are put in place promptly”.
Here’s a snapshot of global energy use. Fossil fuels account for 80 per cent of demand: oil (34 per cent); coal (25 per cent); natural gas (21 per cent). The rest comes from wood, other biomass and waste (11 per cent); nuclear power (6.5 per cent); hydro-power (2.2 per cent). Less than 1 per cent of global energy demand is met by clean sources such as geothermal, solar and wind.
Shifting this energy production pattern towards a system that produces little greenhouse gas emissions is politically difficult and very costly, particularly in Asia.
Oxford University economist Dieter Helm – who has co-edited a new book, The Economics And Politics Of Climate Change – says climate change is really “about the massive increase of coal burning internationally, especially the growth of China and India fuelled by coal-based energy – and America too, where the Obama plans are also small relative to the problem”.
What does he mean? Coal fuels heavy industries, like steel and cement. But electricity is the key. It powers so much of modern life, from cooling and heating to lighting, computers and the Internet.
Electricity production accounts for nearly one-third of global fossil fuel use. It is the source of about 40 per cent of energy-related carbon dioxide emissions, and about one-fifth of greenhouse gas emissions from human activity.
Half of the electricity generated in the United States is from coal. In India, the figure is 70 per cent, and in China, 80 per cent. Why? Because coal is up to six times less expensive per unit of energy than oil or gas. It is also locally available in huge quantities. [Blog note: NOT so for Sabah!! So, WHY are we still using IMPORTED coal from Indonesia but not our own natural gas from Kimanis??]
Yet, despite some improvements, coal remains the most carbon-intensive of the fossil fuels. Modern US coal-fired plants still emit nitrogen oxides and sulphur dioxide at nine and 90 times the rate of new gas-fired plants respectively. And these plants emit carbon dioxide at more than twice the rate of new plants that generate electricity by burning natural gas.
In 2000, coal provided 28 per cent of the world’s fossil fuel energy production, compared with 45 per cent for oil. By last year, coal’s share had risen to 33 per cent. Coal use in China and India alone is not far short of consumption in the US and the rest of the world combined.
While coal use has started declining in many developed economies, China has in recent years been commissioning the equivalent of two 500MW coal-fired power plants per week, adding a capacity comparable to the entire power grid of Britain each year. A single such plant releases about 3 million tonnes of carbon dioxide annually into the air.
India uses only about a fifth as much coal as China. But with a population similar to that of China, a rapidly expanding economy and rising demand for electricity, India may one day come to rival China in its coal use.
Demand for electricity is growing in South-east Asia too. If countries in the region were committed to cutting emissions, they would follow Singapore, Malaysia [???] and Thailand in switching from coal- and oil-burning plants to gas.
Instead, coal use is rising. Indonesia is in the midst of adding 10,000MW of coal-fired power to an existing capacity of 35,000MW, of which about 20 per cent burns coal. Indonesia became the world’s largest exporter of thermal coal for power plants in 2007.
Vietnam plans to bring nearly 49,000MW of capacity online between 2006 and 2015. Over half the addition is to be fuelled by coal.
Even Malaysia and Thailand are planning to increase coal use in their power plants to lower costs and diversify sources of fuel.
The World Bank’s development report last month noted that 1.6 billion people – nearly a quarter of the world’s population – have no electricity. These citizens of developing countries need massive expansions in energy, transport, urban systems and agricultural production.
Clean or not, coal is likely to be a big part of their future energy needs. – The Straits Times
[But why do we have to use it when we have environmentally-friendly alternatives like gas, hydro and so on??]
Popularity: 7% [?]

Kota Kinabalu: Five non-governmental organisations (NGOs) are combining forces in Sabah in an unprecedented move to oppose dirty energy such as coal-fired power plants.
The Sabah Unite to Re-Power the Future or Green Surf coalition consists of the Land Empowerment Animals and People (Leap), Partners of Community Organisations (Pacos Trust), Sabah Environmental Protection Association (Sepa), the Malaysian Nature Society Sabah branch and Sabah office of WWF-Malaysia.
These bodies, which all have differing ideas and objectives, believe this union would push for the achievement of one universal goal – to find and present positive solutions to the current energy situation in the State.
At a joint press conference to announce the alliance at Tanjung Aru beach here, Saturday, founder and director of Leap, Cynthia Ong, said the unification was a result of the public approaching the respective organisations and wanting something concrete done on environmental issues, the proposed coal-fired power plant in Lahad Datu being the flavour of the week.
“With Sabah putting itself forward as a leader in conservation in the region, we really feel that such an event (setting up of coal-fired power plant) would undermine all the efforts of our organisations.
“This is why we have to step up. And also the public has approached our respective organisations, so we’re answering that call.
“This is not anti-government but we are supporting the Government in looking for new solutions and using the might of our organisations to support (the solutions),” she said.
“We are not just saying ‘no coal or anti-coal’ but will find alternative energy solutions for the State and present them to our leadership and public.
“But the main thing is of course is to change the course of direction towards the future of energy, which we feel should be renewable É we’re actually pro-active about (finding) solutions,” she said, pointing out there are many unexplored solutions.
Sepa President Wong Tack said the coalition was a good start towards better conservation efforts, adding they need the public to back them if they were really to hit the ground running.
“I’m sure this platform will expand and closer working relationships would be established.
“This is a very positive start for a greener Sabah and we hope citizens of Sabah will come together. The Prime Minister always emphasises about wanting to listen to the people, so the people must exercise the right so the authorities can hear us.“
Chief Technical Officer of WWF-Malaysia’s Sabah Office, Rahimatsah Amat, urged the public to rally behind the coalition on the energy issue and other urgent environmental issues.
“We do not have a very specific agenda but the agenda is specific towards green things, which on our plate at the very moment is the coal-fired power plant.
“But there could be many more pressing issues that need to be addressed so we need the support of the public to show that we’re moving in the right direction for all of us to have a future in Sabah,” he said, adding they will release information on their developments from time to time.
On the coal-fired power plant, he said the effects would not be felt immediately but years down the line, accentuating the urgency to find an alternative solution to the energy source.
Meanwhile, Green Surf is calling on everyone in Sabah to sign a petition to show their concern for climate change with specific emphasis on the planned coal-fired power plant.
A webpage has been set up on social networking site Facebook, which has garnered 1, 000 members within two weeks.
The public could also visit www.nocoalsabah.blogspot.com, which has a link to the Facebook page to find out more about the issue as well as to sign the online petition.
In a statement, Green Surf also urged the Federal Government to consider developing one of the two budgeted green pioneer townships with green technology in Sabah.
“We applaud the Prime Minister for having the foresight of planning these green pioneer townships and we request for East Malaysia to have one and we recommend the government consider one of our East Coast townships such as Sandakan, Lahad Datu or Tawau.”
http://www.dailyexpress.com.my/news.cfm?NewsID=68550
Sunday, November 01, 2009
Popularity: 8% [?]

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