10 September 2014
Malaysians call for the
immediate stop to mega dam projects across the country
From 10-12 September 2014,
thousands of people will converge in Kuala Lumpur for ASEAN Power
Week. The conference sponsors,
including Sarawak Energy Berhad (SEB) and Tenaga Nasional
Berhad (TNB), are welcoming
the delegates arriving for this three day conference and introducing
their vision of power
generation in Malaysia.
On this occasion, people
representing communities in Sarawak, Sabah and across Peninsular
Malaysia affected by mega
dams, will also be coming to the national capital to directly bring a joint
message to the delegates of
ASEAN Power Week.
We urge all delegates offering
or considering investments in large hydropower dams and associated
facilities in Malaysia,
specifically those projects which are advanced by SEB and TNB, to urgently
withdraw any support and
reconsider any future involvement in order to avoid the serious social,
environmental and economic
risks involved.
Why?
Large dams just aren't worth
the cost
Several internationally
respected experts on the social and environmental impacts of dams, including
Oxford-based researchers and
consultants working for decades to provide advice to dam companies,
have recently spoken up about
the destructive impacts of dams, noting that onerous costs and
damage involved mean the
projects are ‘not worth it’.
This has also been the
position of many Malaysians on grounds that mega dams destroy the
environment and impoverish
local communities. Furthermore, based on a comprehensive study
completed in 2014 by Oxford
economists of over 250 dams built in recent years around the world,
there is mounting evidence
that dams are not economical or sustainable investments.
The 2400 MW Bakun Dam project
exemplifies everything wrong with mega-dam projects. It went
ahead even when energy demand
in the whole of Sarawak state was only around 400 MW in 1997.
Some 10,000 indigenous peoples
from 15 different communities in 1998 were forced to resettle and
over 700 square kilometers of
virgin rainforest - an area the size of Singapore island - were
inundated. To make matters
worse, it is currently only running at 50% capacity due to lack of demand.
The Bakun Dam lacked proper
planning and feasibility studies, and failed to meet national
environmental impact
assessment and social impact assessment requirements. Unfortunately, the
dams being currently proposed
are no different, as they too lack comprehensive planning and options assessments
and have not obtained the consent of affected communities to advance.
Despite public outcry,
Malaysia's insatiable thirst for mega-dam projects is not waning. There are
over 12 mega-dams being proposed in Sarawak, 16 in Sabah and at least 3 in
Peninsular Malaysia.Mega dams destroy the lives of our indigenous peoples.
The 10,000 people of Bakun
were forcibly and unjustly displaced from their centuries-old traditional
ancestral land to the slum
conditions of the resettlement scheme at Sg. Asap, a fate that has been
described as ethnocide.
Learning from the nightmarish
experiences of the Bakun Dam and the Sg. Asap Resettlement
Scheme, indigenous communities
throughout Malaysia have stood their ground. The Baram
communities have blockaded
access roads for over 300 days (since 23rd October 2013), because
they, like all other
indigenous communities affected by mega dam projects, have never been asked for
their consent nor given an opportunity to grant or withhold their “free, prior
and informed consent” for the project, a right that is guaranteed by the UN
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), of which Malaysia is
a signatory.
Involuntary resettlement of
Indigenous Peoples is equivalent to destroying them, as a People. This is
because for indigenous
peoples, their well-being and identity are closely linked to their customary
land which they depend on for
their livelihood, sustenance and spiritually.
Mega dams destroy our forests
While local communities
perish, the wider global community is impacted by the devastating effects of mega-dams
on the global climate. Mega-dams flood endangered wildlife habitats that can
never be replaced by any form of ‘biodiversity offset’, disrupt migratory
patterns of fish and birds, and fragment species populations, causing them to
decline. Once flooded, these unique forests, which now serve as vital carbon
sinks, would decompose underwater releasing methane, a global warming gas 25 times
more potent than carbon dioxide. Tropical mega-dams are not ‘green’ projects:
in fact, over the project lifetime, they can contribute as much greenhouse gas
as coal-fired plants!
Furthermore, Malaysia’s
forests are a vital refuge for more than 1000 mammal species and an
estimated 8,500 species of
vascular plants in Peninsular Malaysia, with another 15,000 in the East.
This includes critically-endangered
species protected under the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species of Wild
Fauna and Flora (CITES) like the Bornean orang-utan, pygmy elephant,
Malayan sun bear, tiger and
tapir.
Mega Dams Destroy Businesses
Investing in large dams does
not typically yield a positive return because of the onerous construction
costs involved due to frequent
cost overruns and the long time-span involved. Large dams take years
to build, typically taking
substantially longer than planners estimate. This means they do not respond
to current energy demands. In
reality, the building, engineering and operation of large dams are often driven
by underlying political incentives, leading to an underestimation of actual
project costs and complicity with corrupt or coercive business dealings.
Investing in large dams is
also risky under the current regime of climate change. Since modeling for
dams is typically based on
historical studies of water flows, large dams can be more prone to
operational problems with the
increasing trends towards unpredictable rainfall and flooding patterns, and
longer periods of unexpected droughts.Smaller, more flexible energy generation
options provide a better investment for the future.
Finally, given the level of
community opposition amongst people affected by the building of dams,
most of whom are indigenous
peoples, investing in dams in Malaysia can severely damage the image
of all businesses involved--it
is not an investment in green technology, nor an investment that respects human
rights. All companies considering involvement in dam projects could risk
becoming complicit and liable for violations of constitutional law and
international law.
Our demands
We call upon Sarawak Energy
Berhad, Tenaga Nasional Berhad, the government of Malaysia as well
as institutions that are
considering or offering loans, financing, or advisory, engineering or
construction services for mega dam projects to uphold Malaysia's constitutional
provisions without exception and respect all international obligations under
the UN, including the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
(UNDRIP).
We also call for the above
actors to:
Respect dam affected peoples’
expression of broad community opposition to these dams and their
decisions to withhold consent
by immediately withdrawing from the respective project sites. All
surveys, bidding processes,
land acquisition and preparatory site work—including logging—for these
projects should be immediately
halted.
Address the lack of
transparency surrounding these projects by publicly releasing all studies,
surveys
and plans completed to date
about the proposed dams and their impacts, making them available
online and in hard copy in
Bahasa Melayu, English and local indigenous languages.
Return all lands acquired for
the proposed dams to the native customary rights land holders. Any
further action towards
extinguishing the rights of rightful landholders and usurping the properties
without free, prior and
informed consent (FPIC) of all affected residents and their leaders (selected
and agreed upon by the
community concerned) is unconstitutional and should not proceed.
Respect and abide by the
national court rulings to uphold native customary land rights based on the
provisions of Malaysia's
Constitution.
Federal and state governments
must proactively address the electricity needs of the indigenous
communities by exploring
genuine and sustainable form of energy systems such as off-grid, stand
alone community-based renewable
energy projects.
We further condemn the
conversion of the precious river resources into cheap energy and the
immoral sale of these energy
sources to dirty industries like aluminum and manganese smelting
under Sarawak Corridor of
Renewable Energy (SCORE).
We, therefore, demand that
Sarawak Energy Berhad, Tenaga Nasional Berhad, the State Governments of Sabah,
Sarawak and in Peninsular Malaysia and the Federal Government to
immediately put a stop to this
unsustainable practice and end the violation of the rights of the
indigenous peoples.
This statement is endorsed by
the following concerned organisations and individuals (in alphabetical
order):
1. Angkatan Rakyat Muda (ARM)
2. Asia Indigenous Peoples
Network on Extractive Industries and Energy (AIPNEE Asia)
3. Asia Indigenous Peoples
Pact (AIPP)
4. Borneo Resources Institute
Malaysia (BRIMAS)
5. Bruno Manser Fund
6. Center for Orang Asli
Concerns (COAC)
7. Democratic Action Party
(DAP) Sarawak
8. Hands of Malaysians
Extended (HOME)
9. International Rivers
10. Jaringan Orang Asal
SeMalaysia (JOAS)
11. Jaringan Tanah Hak Adat
Bangsa Asal Sarawak (TAHABAS)
12. Kuala Lumpur &
Selangor Chinese Assembly Women Section
13. LEAP Spiral
14. Malaysian Physicians for
Social Responsibility (MPSR)
15. Mamas Bersih
16. New Era College Alumni
Association endorses
17. Partners of Community
Organisations in Sabah (PACOS Trust)
18. Persatuan Belia Perubahan
Iklim
19. Rainbow Genders Society
20. Sabah Environmental
Protection Association (SEPA)
21. Sahabat Alam Malaysia
(SAM)
22. SALT
23. Sarawak Dayak Iban
Association (SADIA)
24. SAVE Rivers
25. Save Sabah Rivers
Coalition (SSRC)
26. Socia-Economic Committee
of the KL & Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall (KLSCAH)
27. Southeast Asia Renewable
Energy People's Assembly (SEAREPA)
28. Suara Rakyat Malaysia
(SUARAM)
29. Sunflower Electoral
Education
30. Task Force Against Kaiduan
Dam (TAKAD)
31. Teoh Beng Hock Trust for
Democracy
32. Women Development of
Malaysia PJ New Town Section
33. Writers' Alliance for
Media Independence
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