New Straits Times

‘Concern over RM12.5 billion project’

ENVIRONMEN­TAL experts who gave the Kuala Linggi Internatio­nal Port in Malacca the thumbs down are puzzled that the developer is going ahead with the project.

- REPORTS BY ARNAZ M. KHAIRUL & KELLY KOH

JUST how the RM12.5 billion Kuala Linggi Internatio­nal Port (KLIP) has been given the goahead to begin constructi­on in the first quarter of next year has left experts, who deemed the project an environmen­tal hazard, puzzled.

Experts involved in the Detailed Environmen­tal Impact Assessment (DEIA) report on the proposed KLIP insist the Department of Environmen­t (DoE) had not approved the project, based on its location.

Internatio­nal Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM) Department of Engineerin­g Associate Professor Dr Zaki Zainudin, who was in the team that produced the report, confirmed that the team had agreed upon a consensus against the project.

“The main issue was the location. The port would be built on reclaimed land, which would form an island right at the river mouth of Sungai Linggi.

“The biggest concern is that this may disrupt the hydrodynam­ics and cause floods, which would affect towns and people upstream.

“We came to a consensus that the location was not suitable as it would disrupt the flow of water from the river, marine life and the livelihood of the people.

“Thus, I was shocked to see press reports that the project would start in the first quarter of next year, when our team (which did the DEIA report) had advised the DoE against it. The DoE would then not provide approval based on this report,” he told the New Straits Times.

The commenceme­nt of the project, announced by owners TAG Marine Sdn Bhd on Nov 28, with its managing director, Datuk Wira Noormustaf­a Kamal Yahya, also announcing the bulk of the funding would be from Chinese investors, will be an expansion of the Kuala Linggi Port, which opened in 2001.

The Kuala Linggi Port serves mainly the oil and gas industry, while the expansion would be to provide larger scale servicing facilities aimed at the more than 100,000 vessels transporti­ng US$60 billion (RM266.5 billion) worth of trade through the Straits of Malacca annually.

Noormustaf­a had said the project would provide 6,000 new jobs.

This, however, raised further question marks and public outcry over the excessive land reclamatio­n along Malacca’s 70km-long coastline, with another project amassing land past Pulau Upeh, about 20km south of Kuala Linggi, allegedly causing dangerous levels of erosion at the coast along Tanjung Kling.

Along the coast of Malacca, public outcry is increasing as the once popular stretches of beaches in Klebang have disappeare­d, while the livelihood­s of fishermen continue to be affected.

Malacca Chief Minister Datuk Seri Idris Haron, when contacted by the NST, ticked off the developers, stating that the project would only be allowed to continue when all standards were adhered to.

“Launching it is not a sign that work can commence.

“They can launch it a thousand times, but if the required documentat­ion and standards are not met, the project will not be allowed to continue,” he said.

Page 1 pic: The proposed site for the Kuala Linggi Internatio­nal

Port at the river mouth of Sungai Linggi in Malacca.

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 ?? Pix by Zunnur Al Shafiq ?? The Kuala Linggi Internatio­nal Port will be built on reclaimed land, forming an island at the river mouth of Sungai Linggi in Malacca.
Pix by Zunnur Al Shafiq The Kuala Linggi Internatio­nal Port will be built on reclaimed land, forming an island at the river mouth of Sungai Linggi in Malacca.
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 ??  ?? Kampung Hailam in Tanjung Kling, Malacca, where rapid erosion has endangered the livelihood of the people.
Kampung Hailam in Tanjung Kling, Malacca, where rapid erosion has endangered the livelihood of the people.

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