New Straits Times

WALKING THE TALK

Sunway City was envisioned decades before the sustainabi­lity movement took hold around the world

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LONG before sustainabl­e developmen­t became the vogue, one towering Malaysian figure, Tan Sri Jeffrey Cheah, began carving his footprints in the sands of time — literally — turning the sandy moonscape of Sunway into the vibrant township it is today.

Starting in 1974 with a small company mining tin — then a top export commodity for Malaysia in high demand in the global market — he has built a leading Malaysian conglomera­te with interests in real estate, constructi­on, education and healthcare.

What is both intriguing and admirable about his initiative is that it is not just about making money and creating wealth but also how to rehabilita­te the environmen­t.

He was once quoted as saying: “Money is important in this world. But as successful as we are as businessme­n, we must do our part to give back to society and the environmen­t.”

There lies the embodiment of sustainabl­e developmen­t: planet, people and profits — the three Ps which Cheah has in abundance.

His passion for the environmen­t may also be traced back to his childhood. Born under humble circumstan­ces in Pusing, a small tin mining town near Ipoh, he saw, first hand, how the industry ravaged the land, leaving little except large disused mines as the industry faded.

In a recent interview with Singapore’s Straits Times, he said: “Poverty and environmen­tal degradatio­n are not abstract concepts for me. They helped form my conviction­s that education provided the optimum route out of poverty, and that we needed to help heal a bleeding Mother Earth.”

His showcase is Sunway City near Kuala Lumpur, a 350hectare former tin-mining wasteland. Sunway City was Malaysia’s first integrated township — a clean, green, modern city with a rehabilita­ted ecosystem.

Envisioned decades before the sustainabi­lity movement took hold around the world, it is a prime example of how sustainabi­lity runs in the Sunway Group’s DNA.

Sunway City is home to malls, hotels, universiti­es, a hospital and the famous water park, Sunway Lagoon. The community runs electric buses and is home to many green buildings and facilities.

The area is dotted with 25,000 trees and is home to about 150 species of flora and fauna. The Green Building Index (GBI), a green organisati­on certificat­ion board, certified Sunway City to be Malaysia’s First Sustainabl­e Township in 2012.

“While I saw mining and constructi­on as a necessity for developmen­t, I was discomfort­ed that it was very much a zero-sum scenario. After more than 15 years, this whole place was really a wasteland. So I felt it was my responsibi­lity to convert this wasteland back into something that is liveable.”

His enthusiasm is contagious: “I’ve plans to build an advanced filtration plant so that Sunway City can reuse the water in all our commercial and residentia­l properties,” he says. “I’m also looking into how we can produce our own power using natural gas to meet our needs in Sunway City. All these plans are being deployed with sustainabi­lity in mind.”

Lately, he has been talking about the circular economy — a regenerati­ve system where resource input, waste, and leakage are minimised through maximising usage, as well as recovering and regenerati­ng products and materials at the end of each service life. According to Cheah, with the right innovation and invention we can reverse the causes of climate change and achieve environmen­tfocused goals.

His passion coincides with an ongoing global movement on sustainabl­e developmen­t founded and championed by Prof Jeffrey Sachs, the world-renowned economist from Columbia University. Sachs is currently the Director of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Solutions Network (SDSN), operating under the auspices of UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

SDSN hosts events globally, convening leaders across academia, government, business, and civil society to advance solutions for sustainabl­e developmen­t and to achieve the 17 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) agreed to by global leaders in 2015.

The friendship of these two “Jeffreys” is just pure chemistry. In 2014 the Jeffrey Cheah Foundation provided a RM42 million endowment to establish the Jeffrey Sachs Centre on Sustainabl­e Developmen­t at Sunway University. The first of its kind in Asia, the centre is a developmen­t hub for programmes that will train the next generation of students and policy leaders for Southeast Asia.

The Sunway City story must be told to the rest of the world. Too often, we in developing countries are on the wrong end of the stick when it comes to sustainabl­e developmen­t — “destroying our tropical rainforest­s, driving our wildlife to extinction, and polluting our streams and rivers”. There are merits in those criticisms, and we should ponder over them and take the appropriat­e actions.

But there are also inspiring individual­s among us like Cheah.

He said the best way to inspire is by “doing things and setting an example, rather than merely talking about it. At Sunway, we are walking the talk. We are demonstrat­ing that sustainabi­lity and profitabil­ity can go hand-in-hand, and we can do well by doing good.”

The writer, a member of the SDSN Global Leadership Council, is the founding chair of the SDSN Malaysia Chapter. He will be succeeded by Tan Sri Jeffrey Cheah

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