Showing posts with label Aluminium Smelter Plant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aluminium Smelter Plant. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Baram Dam protests escalate, assemblyman asks for cooling off period

Workers with their packed bags waiting to leave in boats after they were prevented from entering the dam site by protesting natives.
Workers with their packed bags waiting to leave in boats after they were prevented from entering the dam site by protesting natives.
MIRI: A Barisan Nasional politician wants a temporary halt to ground testing and survey works at the proposed Baram hydro-electric dam site in interior northern Sarawak due to escalating protests and blockades staged by the natives.
Telang Usan assemblyman Dennis Ngau, who is Barisan Youth chief for Baram, told The Star Online the situation is "very hot" on the ground with the protesting natives showing unrelenting aggression. He is worried the situation will boil over into a physical confrontation.

Ngau wants a cooling period while he and other local Barisan politicians find a way out of this latest dispute that has threatened to turn into a serious political and social issue.

"Stop all ground works for the time being until further notice. Don't confront the protesters. Leave it to us politicians to find a solution," Ngau advised workers and contractors who are carrying out rock drilling between Long Naah and Long Kesseh some 200kms inland from Miri City.

Ngau said he has advised workers of Sarawak Energy Bhd and officials from the state Land and Survey Department to stay away from the site for now.

"These workers have left the area. They were advised not to confront the protesting natives.

"I have asked the community leaders in Long Naah and Long Kesseh and surrounding villages to cool down the protesters.

"The best thing now for all parties is for a cooling period to set in. The workers should not attempt to force their way past the protesters.

"The protesters are very aggressive and I am worried if there is physical confrontation.

"I and Baram MP Anyi Ngau are trying to arrange for an urgent meeting with all the relevant people, including the community leaders, to find a way out of this.

"I hope to get in touch with all of the native leaders within the next few days and get them to come down to Miri City where we can discuss things in a rational and calm manner.

"I would like to go into ulu Baram and meet the protesters if possible, but indications are that they will not listen and will not negotiate.

"For now, I think it is best to stay away until they have cooled down," he said of the latest situation in ulu Baram.

Environmental groups, Save Sarawak Rivers and Baram People's Action Committee, told The Star that the protesting natives who have set up blockades in Long Kesseh and the main road leading to the dam site, are reinforcing their barricades and blocking every roads to the dam site.

Save Sarawak Rivers' chairman Peter Kallang said another blockade at Long Lama was also being set up.

"No construction materials and equipment or vehicles are allowed to enter. At the dam site, the protesters are expelling every worker they find.

"Some of the workers and surveyors who were chased away tried to come back to the area, but were stopped at the blockades," he said.

Baram People's Action Committee chairman Philip Jau said the natives, numbering more than a hundred at each of the blockade sites, were made up of villagers, both women and men.

"We are staying day and night and manning the blockades 24 hour non-stop. We will camp out at the blockade sites for as long as needed," he said, adding that there is no other option for the natives but to make sure that they stop every ground work before the dam construction starts.

The proposed Baram Dam is one of 11 new dams that are being planned by the state government throughout Sarawak.

The Baram Dam will uproot at least 20,000 natives from the Kenyahs, Kayans and Penans ethnic groups.

Kallang, Jau and several human rights lawyers and environmental activists had written an appeal to the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland, asking the world body to stop the dam from being built.

Friday, February 12, 2010

US$1b JV smelter for Sarawak

10 February 2010

By B.K. SIDHU

Syed Mokhtar’s GIIG to team up with China’s Aluminium Corp

bksidhu@thestar.com.my

PUTRAJAYA: GIIG Holdings Sdn Bhd, a company controlled by billionaire Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar Al-Bukhary, and Aluminium Corp of China Ltd (Chalco), the world’s second largest producer of alumina, have teamed up to jointly develop an aluminium smelter plant in Samalaju Industrial Park in Bintulu, Sarawak at the cost of US$1bil.

The smelter plant will have an initial annual production capacity of 330,000 tonnes but it could rise to 1.25 million tonnes.

GIIG director Shahrir Shariff said construction of the plant would begin in the first quarter of next year, with completion expected in 36 months.

The project would source power from the 2,400MW Bakun dam.

Smelter Asia Sdn Bhd will be the special purpose vehicle that will develop the smelter plant, and it will have three shareholders, namely GIIG Holdings Sdn Bhd, Chalco and a Sarawak company.

Details on the equity portion for the shareholding structure were not provided as it was still being worked out but Shahrir told reporters after the signing ceremony yesterday that Malaysian shareholders would hold a majority stake in the venture.

Both GIIG and Chalco entered into a heads of agreement yesterday to develop the smelter plant, witnessed by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak and former premier Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad.

The idea of setting up an aluminium smelter in Sarawak was first mooted in 2002 to capture part of the growing demand for aluminium in Asia, with plans to use excess power from the Bakun Project.

With the agreement inked, Shahrir said talks with Sarawak Energy Bhd (SEB) for the purchase of power for the smelter project would resume and that he hoped to “get a reasonable rate for the supply of energy for the plant.’’ The plant would need 600MW of power.

“We are looking at debt and equity funding for the smelter and talking to some Chinese and other banks,’’ he said when asked on how the project would be funded.

Chalco’s shares are jointly listed on the New York Stock Exchange and the stock exchanges of Hong Kong and Shanghai.

It owns and operates 31 companies and subsidiaries across China, has assets worth US$20bil and recorded group revenue of US$11.3bil for 2008.

Najib said the JV between Malaysia and China to develop an aluminium smelting plant in Samalaju Industrial Park reflected the confidence the Chinese government and investors had in making large investments in the country, and in Sarawak specifically.

“This gives a positive sign to the investment climate in Malaysia. I hope this marks a recovery in economy this year. Many more foreign investments should be flowing into our country,’’ Najib said.

He added that the development of the smelting industry in Sarawak would also provide a strong drive in the development of Score (Sarawak Corridor of Renewable Energy).

Industries that use energy and that can generate high income, as well as high-value and high-tech industries can be located in Sarawak, according to Najib.

Smelter Asia will be the second smelter project in the Samalaju Industrial Park, after another project by Salco, which is a 40:60 joint venture between Cahya Mata Sarawak Bhd and Rio Tinto Alcan (a subsidiary of Rito Tinto Aluminium, a leading global mining company based in Australia).

On whether there was still room to locate large smelting plants in Sarawak, Najib said: “Two licences have been given out. That is the commitment by the Government. We just have to work out the supply of power.”

He did not name the licensee but Smelter Asia said it had obtained all the necessary licences from the International Trade and Industry Ministry while it is learnt that Comalco, now known as Rio Tinto, also has a licence to set up a smelter plant in Sarawak.

Last month the State Grid of China, the world’s largest utility company, inked an agreement with 1Malaysia Development Bhd as the former has plans to invest in Sarawak’s economic corridor.

Some of the projects these parties may jointly pursue include an aluminium smelter and three hydropower plants, but details are still sketchy.

Source: The Star
Link: http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/2/10/business/5647727&sec=business

Power transmission to cater for smelter project

5 February 2010

By JACK WONG

jackwong@thestar.com.my

KUCHING: The RM209mil Bakun-Similajau overhead transmission system project is for the import of additional electricity into the Sarawak state power grid system but primarily, to meet the power requirements of the proposed aluminium smelter project in Samalaju Industrial Park in Bintulu Division.

The project was awarded by Sarawak Energy Bhd (SEB) to Sinohydro-Naim joint venture last month. Sinohydro and Naim Holdings Bhd have a 60:40 share respectively in the joint venture.

“Sinohydro will provide the technological know-how and expertise in the implementation of the project,” said Naim corporate service and human resource senior director Ricky Kho.

He said the project would involve the construction of two transmission lines, one of which is a 112-km double-circuit quad bundle 275-kV line from the proposed Similajau power substation to the Bakun hydroelectric dam substation in the upper Rejang River Basin.

The second line would involve the construction of a 26-km double-circuit quad bundle 275-kV line from the proposed Similajau substation to the proposed aluminium smelter substation, Kho said.

“The project will develop the second phase of transmission interconnection between Bakun and Similajau 275-kV substation.

“It serves to reinforce power import of more than 1,000MW additional power from Bakun dam into the state power grid system, and between 900MW and 1,200MW from Bakun dam into the proposed aluminium smelter in the Samalaju Industrial Park,” he told StarBiz yesterday.

Kho said preliminary works of the Bakun-Similajau transmission line project started a month ago.

The project’s completion date under the two-year contract is Jan 3, 2012.

In 2007, Rio Tinto Alcan, the world’s third largest mining group, and Cahya Mata Sarawak Bhd (CMSB), announced the setting up of a 60:40 joint venture to invest in a proposed RM7bil aluminium smelter in Samalaju Industrial Park. The proposed smelter is expected to start with an initial production of 550,000 tonnes a year, which will eventually be raised to 1.5mil tonnes annually.

Under a memorandum of undstanding (MoU) signed between SEB, CMSB and Rio Tinto in 2008, SEB would supply power of between 900MW and 1,200MW to the proposed Rio Tinto-CMSB JV aluminium smelter. Bakun dam, which could generate up to 2,400MW, is expected to start producing 300MW in the fourth quarter of this year.
— By JACK WONG

Source: The Star
Link: http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/2/5/business/5615539&sec=business