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    Home»Business»Malaysia’s largest state aims to be region’s ‘green battery’
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    Malaysia’s largest state aims to be region’s ‘green battery’

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    Sarawak’s leadership believes it could become a keystone in South-east Asia’s energy transition

    MALAYSIA’S verdant, river-crossed state of Sarawak is charging ahead with plans to become a regional “green battery”, but its renewable energy dreams could come at serious environmental cost, experts warn.

    Wedged between peninsular Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore and the Philippines, Sarawak is well placed to become a keystone in a regional energy transition. That’s what the Malaysian state’s leadership believes.

    Its many rivers and streams offer potentially abundant hydroelectricity, and could one day power production of green hydrogen.

    It is also installing solar and touting biomass to grow its renewable capacity, with Premier Abang Johari Tun Openg telling investors in Europe last week that the state is “committed to a low-carbon and sustainable energy future”.

    But environmental groups warn much of this green energy infrastructure contributes to deforestation and the displacement of indigenous groups.

    And for now, Sarawak’s main export is a fossil fuel: liquefied natural gas.

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    Harnessing hydropower

    Sarawak began generating hydroelectricity several decades ago, and is currently building a fourth hydropower plant.

    They currently account for around 3,500 megawatts (MW), which is enough to light about two million to three million South-east Asian households daily.

    Its first floating solar field is already producing around 50 MW, and more than a dozen others are planned, said Chen Shiun, senior vice-president of Sarawak Energy Corporation.

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    With a population of fewer than three million, the huge potential energy surplus is obvious, he said.

    By 2030, Sarawak aims to generate around 10,000 MW, mostly from hydropower, with solar and natural gas contributing.

    It wants to supply neighbouring Sabah state and Brunei, and potentially mainland Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines.

    The state’s ambitions are “bold and promising”, and send “a strong signal for accelerating the region’s energy transition,” said Shabrina Nadhila, an Asia analyst at energy think-tank Ember.

    “Good example”

    South-east Asia’s power demands have more than doubled in the last decade, and will only grow further as the expanding middle class installs air-conditioning and energy-hungry data centres emerge.

    Malaysia is hoping that the growing demand will re-energise a long-mooted electricity grid connecting members of Asean.

    “Sarawak is a good example that we can learn from, especially when we talk about the APG (Asean Power Grid),” said top Malaysian energy official Zaidi Mohd Karli.

    Already, a 128 km cross-border electricity connection is bringing hydropower from Sarawak to neighbouring Indonesia.

    The state is also learning from other Asean member states such as Laos, which launched a similar hydro-powered plan in February, aiming to exchange around 1,500 MW of electricity with China by next year.

    Environmental fears

    But the state’s grand aspirations remain dogged by environmental concerns over the destruction of ancient tropical rainforests for hydropower construction and timber logging.

    “Although Sarawak has the lowest emissions grade factor by far of any state in Malaysia, it also has the largest rate of deforestation,” said Adam Farhan of environmental watchdog RimbaWatch.

    “A large part of that can be attributed to hydropower.”

    More than 9,000 indigenous people were relocated from Bakun to make space for one of South-east Asia’s largest dams, commissioned in 2011.

    Almost 70,000 hectares – an area about the size of Singapore – of forest ecosystem was flooded, according to several environmental organisations and academic studies.

    Relocation and compensation issues continue even today and there are fears of repeat scenarios and exclusion of local communities as new hydropower projects launch elsewhere, environmental groups said.

    “The expansion of large hydropower infrastructure in Sarawak raises important environmental and social concerns,” Ember’s Nadhila said.

    “To address these challenges, it is crucial to enforce strict and comprehensive environmental and social safeguards,” she warned.

    Farhan from RimbaWatch added: “Sarawak needs to do a lot more to sort out its indigenous rights issues and its deforestation issues before I think it could call itself a ‘green battery’ for South-east Asia.” AFP

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