The Philippine Star

Malaysia eyes over 10-fold price hike in S’pore water deal

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PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia (AP) — Malaysia’s prime minister said Monday he is seeking to hike the price of water sold to neighborin­g Singapore by more than 10 times as his country searches for ways to pay off massive debts.

Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who shot back to power in an electoral upset in May, told The Associated Press that a decades-old treaty governing the water agreement needs to be revised to reflect increases in the cost of living.

The water deal has long been a point of contention between the two countries. Mahathir said in June he wants to renegotiat­e the deal.

Malaysia currently sells water to Singapore at 3 sen (0.7 US cents) per thousand gallons and buys treated water at 50 sen (12 cents) per thousand gallons.

Mahathir said that by comparison, the southern Malaysian state of Johor sells water to the neighborin­g state of Melaka at 30 sen per 1,000 gallons — a rate he described as “charitable” given that it’s a domestic deal.

“To a foreign country, we need to get more than that,” he said. He declined to discuss specifics, citing ongoing negotiatio­ns.

Singapore Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishn­an has said his country will live up to the agreement and expects Malaysia to do the same.

Mahathir also continued to cast doubt on the value of a high-speed rail project linking the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, to the wealthy island city-state. He announced the cancellati­on of the project in May as part of a wider review of big-ticket infrastruc­ture deals reached under his predecesso­r, Najib Razak, though the government has since reconsider­ed and is trying to renegotiat­e the terms.

“We cannot afford it. If the price is brought down within our means, then maybe we’ll go ahead,” he said Monday. He added, though, that it would be preferable to improve existing train lines to improve travel times.

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