| Dam may affect Unesco heritage listing |
| Wednesday, 23 July 2008 | |
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Malaysiakini News Sarawak's plan to build a hydroelectric dam threatens the World Heritage status of the Mulu National Park, environmentalists warned today.
Activists warned the damage would change the boundary of the park, which could see its World Heritage status revoked under the regulations of the UN cultural body Unesco. The sensitive 52,864 hectare park contains some 3,500 species of plants with 109 species of palms, according to the Unesco website. The park is dominated by Gunung Mulu, a 2,377 metre high sandstone pinnacle containing at least 295km of explored caves that are home to millions of cave swiftlets and bats, it said.
"It has asked the Malaysian government to clarify this but they have not received a reply so far and it has been a month," he said. "If there is a change without consent... then Unesco can revoke the heritage site listing for the park."
But BMF said ethnic groups who live in the national park would have to be relocated if the project went ahead. "If these plans were to be realised, several thousand natives would lose their traditional lands in the Bornean rainforest and would have to be relocated," it said in a statement. The Tutoh dam is part of plans for 12 new hydroelectric projects in Sarawak and with the 2,400 megawatt Bakun Dam project, will increase the state's total power generating capacity by 600 percent in 2020.
Currently, the state's power production of 933 megawatts is enough to meet its daily needs, but the government plans to expand the aluminium smelting industry which will need more power, the paper reported. Power from the 12 new hydroelectric projects will meet this increased demand, with excess output transferred to peninsular Malaysia to help meet the rest of the country's energy needs. However, environmentalists disagree with the government's forecast. "The projects... are not sustainable. The current Bakun Dam would be enough for the aluminium smelter the state has planned to build right now," Gurmit said. "Even if they could generate that much (excess) power, it would be very costly to bring the electricity to peninsular Malaysia via undersea cables." The actual beneficiaries Malaysia already faces fierce criticism over the environmental impact of the Bakun dam project in Sarawak, which involves flooding an area the size of Singapore island. Some 10,000 residents have had to evacuate the project site, including the indigenous Penan tribe, a nomadic people who live off the forests in Borneo. The plight of the Penan was made famous in the 1990s by environmental activist Bruno Manser, who campaigned to protect their way of life and fend off the loggers. He vanished in 2000, a suspected victim of foul play. |