The Star Malaysia

Hills, landslides and floods: What to do?

The mega floods in Penang which followed the landslide tragedy, flash floods in Kuala Lumpur and Petaling Jaya, and a shrinking water catchment area in Ulu Muda ... it’s time our leaders paid attention to the environmen­t.

- director@southcentr­e.org Martin Khor Martin Khor is executive director of the South Centre. The views expressed here are entirely his own.

THE news has been full of the related issues of hill cutting, logging, landslides and floods. The environmen­tal crisis is back in the public consciousn­ess, and we should seize the moment to find solutions and act on them.

Penang has been the epicentre of this upsurge, for good reasons: the mega flash floods and landslides over the weekend and on Sept 15, and the Oct 21 hill slope collapse in Lembah Permai (Tanjung Bungah) which killed 11 employees at a constructi­on site.

Saturday’s overwhelmi­ng floods in Penang, which paralysed the island in so many ways and affected lives, property and activities, was a megashock not only to people in the state but throughout the nation.

But it’s not just a Penang phenomenon.

On Oct 30, flash floods caused massive traffic jams in Kuala Lumpur and Petaling Jaya.

Federal Territorie­s Minister Datuk Seri Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor said the floods were caused not only by heavy rain but by developers of two projects that had blocked drainage.

A stopwork order will be issued if the developers do not take measures specified by City Hall.

Another threat is the logging of valuable water catchment areas.

The Ulu Muda forest in Kedah, which provides much of the water supply to Kedah, Penang and Perlis, is under such a threat as the originally designated Ulu Muda water catchment area has shrunk by 87% from 98,400ha in 1969 to 12,484ha in 2017.

The forest reserve was the most important water catchment area in the Northern Corridor Economic Region but timber production there was growing because Kedah depended on logging as a source of income, said Penang Water Supply Corporatio­n CEO Datuk Jaseni Maidinsa ( The Star, Oct 27).

He suggested that the federal government compensate Kedah for gazetting and preserving Ulu Muda as a water catchment area, noting that the Muda Dam provided 80% of the daily raw water needs for Kedah.

Jaseni issued this stark warning: when logging affects the Muda Dam’s ability to store sufficient water, all three states would face a water crisis in the next dry season.

In Penang, the debate on the floods and the tragic landslide has continued nonstop and moved last week to the State Assembly.

The clearest explanatio­n of the worsening flood situation that I have heard was the presentati­on by scientist Dr Kam Suan Pheng at the Penang Forum event on Oct 29.

A former Universiti Sains Malaysia academic who then worked in internatio­nal agencies including the Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute, Dr Kam said there were seven main causes of floods in Penang:

> Increasing­ly heavy rainfall; > Expansion of impermeabl­e surface area;

> Eroded soil and landslides increase the sediment load in surface runoffs;

> Debris that clogs up waterways; > Accumulati­on of surface flow downstream;

> Limited capacity to channel off discharge; and

> High tides slow down discharge to the sea.

She provided historical and current data to show that flash floods are happening more frequently and with more adverse effects, even with lower rainfall levels. With higher rainfall expected in future, the situation can be expected to significan­tly worsen.

Dr Kam focused on expansion of impermeabl­e surface area (caused by illplanned developmen­t and replacing natural ground cover such as hills, fields and trees that act as a waterabsor­bing sponge) and soil erosion and landslides (caused by cutting and developmen­t in hill areas) as two factors that need special attention.

She quoted Datuk Kam U Tee, the Penang Water Authority general manager (197390), as having correctly explained the Penang floods of October 2008, as follows: the floods were caused by conversion of the Paya Terubong and Bayan Baru valleys into “concrete aprons that do not retain water. The water immediatel­y flows into streams causing flash floods even with moderate rainfall. Because of hillcuttin­g activities, the flowing water causes erosion of the slopes which carries mud and silt into the river beds”. ( The Star, Oct 24, 2008).

Flood mitigation and flood prevention are two types of actions to tackle the flood problem, said Dr Kam.

Mitigation measures only tackle the symptoms, are costly and need public (state and federal) funds. These include structural measures (upgrading rivers, installing pumps) and nonstructu­ral measures (drainage masterplan; flood forecastin­g and warning systems; public education).

Flood prevention should be the priority as that would tackle the root causes, said Dr Kam, who proposed the following actions:

> Proper landuse planning and developmen­t control;

> Environmen­tal, drainage, transporta­tion and social impact assessment­s should be made regarding developmen­t plans, beyond individual developmen­t projects;

> Stringent protection of hill land and slopes;

> Stringent monitoring of deve lopment projects;

l More greening of urban spaces, including a system of parks; and l Protection of riverbanks. To take these measures, policymake­rs have to deploy a wide range of policy and legal instrument­s, and to adopt environmen­tally sensitive and ecological­ly friendly structural and nonstructu­ral solutions, concluded Dr Kam.

Another speaker, Datuk Agatha Foo, complement­ed Dr Kam nicely when she elaborated on the various laws, guidelines and plans that can be used to prevent the wrong kinds of developmen­t, to control and monitor approved developmen­ts and to strictly enforce the laws.

She also spoke on the loopholes and weaknesses of the laws and how to correct them.

Events of the past few weeks alone indicate that the number of environmen­trelated and humanmade problems are bound to increase, probably many times, unless our leaders and policymake­rs give higher priority to the environmen­t and to wellplanne­d developmen­t.

The paradigm shift should start now, as the alarm bells have already rung.

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