Extracted from Malaysiakini
Anil Netto |
Sep 29,
\Preliminary
work on a RM3 billion dam in Murum in
Its advocates say that the
proposed 944MW Murum dam, near the site of the contentious 2,400MW Bakun dam,
still under construction, in the upper Rejang basin in central
But while private firms may benefit from the dam construction work and cheap
electricity, critics argue that the human cost, the financial burden and risk
to the state and the public, and the environmental cost could be too high.
Sarawak
Energy Berhad (
While the state is using its resources to build the dams, about 1,000
indigenous folk in the Murum Dam catchment area will lose their homeland. Most
of these are Penan, amongst the last of the world's hunter-gatherers, living
near the Murum, Plieran and Danum rivers and tributaries.
New dam lies in Bakun catchment area
Weng, a Penan, whose longhouse - traditional wooden houses - and ancestral land
will be flooded, laments: ''The good things we ask for, they (the government)
do not give. We ask for schools, clinics, but till now we have yet to see them.
What we don't want, what is bad for us, that they provide - logging, oil palm
plantations, acacia plantations...''
The haste to commence work on the dam leaves activists worried that there might
not be proper consultation and inadequate work on the resettlement of one of
the most marginalised and disenfranchised peoples in the country.
The experience of the problem-ridden Bakun dam, whose reservoir area will cover
695 sq km, is hardly inspiring. The RM8 billion Bakun dam is expected to be
completed in June 2010 and start
generating power in 2012.
Some 11,000
indigenous people - mainly Kenyah, Kayan, Lahanan, Ukit and Penan - were
displaced and just over 9,000 of them were transferred to a resettlement scheme
in
Critics point out that a large portion of the dams' catchment areas has already
been degraded by massive plantation developments.
"The whole Bakun catchment is being destroyed by logging and
plantation," points out Raymond Abin, programme development officer at the
Borneo Resources Institute (Brimas), a group working closely with indigenous
communities to monitor environmental and development issues. Forests have been
logged to plant oil palm, pulp and wood tree plantations.
Moreover,
the Murum dam, just 60km upstream from Bakun, lies in one of the three main
catchment areas for Bakun.
''Has any work been done on cumulative impacts? How will all this affect the
micro-climate or local climate, the hydrological regimes, the animal life of
the area, already much devastated by the logging and plantation development?''
asked a Sarawak-based academic, who declined to be named.
''Indeed, how will Murum affect Bakun? Doesn't the public deserve to know the
results of these cumulative impact assessments?'' the academic added.
Uncertainty over Bakun-generated power
The plan for the Murum dam comes at a time when
uncertainty hangs over what to do with all the electricity to be generated from
the 205-metre high Bakun dam.
The original plan was to transmit the electricity via cables under the
In 2005, however, the government decided it would not be cost effective to
transmit electricity to
capacity.
But these plans were thrown into uncertainty after Sime Darby, a
government-linked corporation, worried about the plan's viability, pulled out
in August from an understanding to lead the laying of RM15 billion undersea
cables.
The electricity from the Bakun dam will now be channelled to the aluminium
smelter plants until the Murum dam is ready, the Sarawak Energy managing
director said in June. If and when the submarine cables are laid in the