Extracted from Malaysiakini
Bakun
dam to be much worse than PKFZ scandal
Kua Kia Soong |
Sep 22,
Nearly 50
years after independence for
The English did it with
brutality and thoroughness through “butcher” Lord Cumberland and even
obliterated the ‘wild’ Celtic mode of life.
What we have seen in
Thus, even
though the accursed Bakun dam had been suspended in 1997 due to the financial
crisis, the government still went ahead to displace 10,000 indigenous peoples
to the Sungai Asap resettlement camp in 1998.
Well, there is a reason for this - the contract for the Sungai Asap camp had
already been given out to a multinational company. After all, the whole Bakun
area, which is the size of the island of
All this happened while Dr Mahathir Mohamad was the
prime minister. Wasn’t he a
liability to the BN government then?
I was part of the fact-finding mission to Sungai Asap in 1999 and even then we
could see the destruction of so many unique indigenous communities and their
cultures, including the Ukit tribe.
There was only one word to describe what had been done to these indigenous
peoples and their centuries-old cultures... wicked!
Banned from my own country
As a result of my concern for the indigenous peoples and the natural resources
of
But the
contracts for the resettlement scheme and the logging are chicken feed compared
to the mega-bucks to be reaped from the mega-dams. Even before the Bakun dam
ever got started, Malaysian taxpayers had to compensate dam builder Ekran Bhd
and the other “stakeholders” close to RM1 billion in 1997.
How much does it cost to pay our ‘mata-mata’ (police) to investigate the
alleged scandalous rape of our Penan women?
The contracts from building the Bakun dam and the undersea cable run in excess
of RM20 billion. Malaysian taxpayers won’t know the final cost until they are
told the cost overruns when the projects have been completed.
But if the Port Klang Free Zone (PKFZ) scandal is anything to go by, the leaks
and non-accountability all along the line will result in Malaysian taxpayers
paying billions for the same kind of daylight robbery.
In the
early 90s, when the government was trying to assure us that there would be no
irresponsible logging in Sarawak, I pointed out in Parliament that if the
government could not monitor the Bukit Sungai Putih permanent forest and
wildlife reserve just 10 minutes from Kuala Lumpur, how did they expect us to
believe they could monitor the forests in Bakun?
Likewise today, if the government cannot monitor a project in Port Klang just
half an hour from
How can we be assured that we will get to the bottom of politically-linked
scandals when the
How can we be assured that the
It makes no economic sense
In 1980, the Bakun dam was proposed with a power
generating capacity of 2,400MW even though the projected energy needs for the
whole of
The project was thus coupled with the proposal to build the world’s longest
(650km) undersea cable to transmit electricity to the peninsula. An aluminium
smelter at
In 1986, the project was abandoned because of the economic recession although
the then PM Mahathir announced just before the UN Conference on Environment and
Development (Earth Summit) in
So what happened to that commitment, Mahathir?
In 1993, with the upturn in the Malaysian economy, the government once again
announced the revival of the Bakun dam project. To cushion the expected
protests, then Energy Minister S Samy Vellu gave Parliament a poetic
description of a “series of cascading dams” and not one large dam as had been
originally proposed.
Before long, it was announced that the Bakun dam would be a massive 205-metre
high concrete face rockfill dam - one of the highest dams of its kind in the
world - and it would flood an area the size of
The undersea cable was again part of the project. There was also a
plan for an aluminium plant, a pulp and paper plant, the world’s biggest steel
plant and a high-tension and high-voltage wire industry.
Have feasibility studies been done to see if there will be adequate local,
regional and international demand for all these products?
Six years later, after the economy was battered by the Asian Financial Crisis,
the government again announced that the project would be resumed albeit on a
smaller scale of 500MW capacity.
Before long in 2001, the 2,400MW scale was once again proposed although the
submarine cable had been shelved. Today we read reports about the government
and companies still contemplating this hare-brained undersea scheme which is
now estimated to cost a whopping RM21 billion!
More mega-dams to be built
The recent announcement that the
Malaysian taxpayers,
Malaysian forests and Malaysian indigenous peoples will again be the main
victims of this misconceived plan. We have been told that some 1,000 more
indigenous peoples will have to be displaced from their ancestral lands to make
way for these two dams.
Apart from
the human cost, ultimately it will be the Malaysian consumers who pay for this
expensive figment of Sarawak Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud’s wild
imagination. Indeed, enough taxpayers’ money has been wasted - Sarawak Hidro
has already spent some RM1.5 billion on the Bakun dam project.
Right now,
the country is being fed conflicting reports about energy demand. There is
supposed to be a 43 percent oversupply of electricity capacity in peninsula
Apart from the economic cost and the wastage, how are investors supposed to
plan for the long-term and medium term? What is the long-term plan for
Bakun? Can Bakun compete with the rest of the world or for that matter,
The suggestion for aluminium smelters to take up the bulk of Bakun electricity
have been mentioned ever since the conception of the Bakun dam project because
they are such a voracious consumer of energy. Even so, has there ever been any
proper assessment of the market viability of such a project with the cheaper
operating costs in
Does it matter that the co-owner of one of the smelters is none
other than Cahaya Mata Sarawak (
Clearly, Bakun energy and
Concerned NGOs have all along called for the abandonment of this monstrous
Bakun dam project because it is economically ill-conceived, socially disruptive
and environmentally disastrous.
The environmental destruction is evident many miles downstream since the whole
Bakun area has been logged by those who have already been paid by Sarawak
Hidro.
The social
atrophy among the 10,000 displaced indigenous peoples at Sungai Asap
resettlement scheme remains the wicked testimony of the Mahathir/Taib era. The
empty promises and damned lives of the displaced peoples as forewarned by NGOs
in 1999 have now been borne out.
The economic viability of the Bakun dam project has been in doubt from the
beginning and the announcement to build two more dams merely reflects a
cavalier disregard for the indigenous peoples, more desecration of
When will Malaysians ever learn?
Dr KUA KIA SOONG is director of Suaram. He was Member of
Parliament for Petaling Jaya from 1990 to 1995.