SIGNING....
Taib signing the plaque at one of the booths he toured yesterday.
By : JOHNSON K SAAI
KUCHING: Hydro electricity
is projected to account for 80 per cent of the power generated in the state by
2020. This would reduce the state’s dependence on gas to generate power from
the present 50 per cent to only five per cent.
In revealing this
projection, Chief Minister Pehin Sri Abdul Taib Mahmud said this was in line
with the state’s desire to ensure the future generation would enjoy a cleaner
environment and a better world.
“At the moment our energy
generation depends 50 per cent on gas, hydro 35 per cent in the last two years
and the other 15 per cent coal fired and till 2020 coal component will remain
at 15 per cent but gas will go down to five per cent while hydro will generate
80 per cent of the state’s energy supply,” he said.
He said this in his keynote
address at the opening of the International Energy Week 2012 (IEW 2012) at
Borneo Convention Centre Kuching (BCCK) here yesterday.
“This is the transition we
are going to make within the next 20 years. This means much cleaner energy and
much more renewable in nature,” he said.
He said that Sarawak was
lucky to achieve that condition while it tried to shift its development from
agro based to that of energy intensive.
He added that the
development of renewable energy was timely in view of the ever increasing price
of petrol without any indication that the trend would stop.
“I do believe that every
country that wants to have a healthy sustainable growth will try to see whether
they can contain the growth of the consumption of petrol and in Asia only Japan
is able to show a remarkable success in this context.
“We are still struggling to
do so and we hope we can do it within one generation.”
He also pointed out that
cheap renewable energy would be vital in the state’s quest to achieve fully
industrialised status by 2030 because investors were no longer looking for
cheap manpower but more at energy lower cost.
Taib said the state was very
fortunate that it was not only in the position to supply competitive cost of
electricity to energy intensive industries but also because the state occupied
a strategic place between the supplier of raw materials, like manganese
bauxites in the south in Australia and South Africa and the biggest consumers
of final materials like aluminium and other glass based products in the north
like China, India or the rest of Asia.
“Because of these factors we
believe that we will be successful in playing the role of the middleman in the
chain of supply. So far we have been able to attract 13 to 14 industries with a
total investment of about RM26 to RM27 billion in about two to three years.
“Those are only the energy
intensive industries in Samalaju and one in Mukah. Another component of SCORE
was the halal-hub which is entirely different from what we are doing in
Samalaju,” he noted. (BP)
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