Tuesday, 22 March 2016

Plans to build Baram Dam scrapped, Adenan distancing himself from Taib Mahmud



Sarawak state government bows to protests and cancels plans for controversial 1500 MW dam project on the Baram river in Malaysian Borneo - Expropriated land to be returned to indigenous communities


KUCHING, March 22, 2016:  It is a great victory for the indigenous peoples of Sarawak. Today, it became public that the State Government under Chief Minister Adenan Satem has officially cancelled the plans for the construction of a controversial mega dam on the Baram river.

In a letter to Harrison Ngau, legal counsel of the affected communities, the Sarawak State Attorney-General’s chambers informed that the expropriation of the native customary rights land for the dam site and the reservoir had been officially revoked.


 It is a victory for the anti-dam natives for their efforts to stop the construction of the mega Baram Dam.

This means the official end to the plans for the construction of the 1500 MW dam whose construction would have flooded 412 km2 of rainforests and displaced up to 20,000 indigenous people.

The Baram dam was designed under Sarawak’s former Chief Minister and current Governor, Taib Mahmud, and aggressively promoted by energy supplier Sarawak Energy as part of a multi-billion dollar hydropower scheme involving the planned construction of 12 mega dams.

With the official announcement of the dam’s cancellation,  Adenan s distancing himself from his predecessor and aiming at regaining trust from Sarawak’s rural communities weeks ahead of a crucial state election.

The Bruno Manser Fund welcomes this important development and congratulates the people of Baram for their victory, a result of the sustained peaceful resistance by the affected Kenyah, Penan and Kayan communities.

The Bruno Manser Fund expects that the cancellation of the Baram dam plans will trigger a review of all mega dam projects in Sarawak and calls for an alternative energy plan, based on mini-grids with micro-hydro, solar and biomass at the core.

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