Sebaliknya ia patut dilihat sebagai isu nasional atau rantau asia, sebab udara dicemari, makananyang dicemari dan air yang dicemari akan sampai ke tanah sabah pada satu hari.
Dengan ini, kami orang orang asal menyeru supaya semua orang yang cintakan alam sekitar, yang cintakan anak anak dan masa depan mereka berani bangkit untuk menjayakan program yang bemakna ini. Ini adalah tanggungjawab kita bersama.
Kelulusan kepada sesuatu institusi yang membawa kemudaratan kepada rakyat di kuantan merupakan satu penindasan kepada rakyat keseluruhannya. Pihak yang memberi kelulusan dan menyokong Lynas adalah musuh kepada negara.
Kalau sesuatu kerajaan yang berbuat demikian, maka sudah begitu jelas sekali ia mengkhianati rakyat yang memilihnya. Saya percaya rakyat sabah sekarang ini tidak akan bertolak ansur lagi terhadap perkara yang sedemikian.
Nasiri Sabiah
Himpunan Hijau 1 Million Signature Campaign
GOOD ON YOU KIDS!
ReplyDeleteLike Fukushima, the contaminated fish can swim from Kuantan to Sabah first stopping by Sarawak......
Also suggest send your protest to the Australian High Commission for exporting their pollution to Malaya and Sabah.
Australian Gov't clever with passing the buck such as send all illegals to PNG..
May Sabah send all illegals to Malaya.
Hope the Malayans will return the favour and look into the major aluminium refinery pollution in Mukah Sarawak etc...which is much nearer to Sabah..
More pollution will come with the SOGT oil gas refinery they are starting up in Sabah too...And wait for it- soon the SCORE project in Sarawak will come on stream with more alumina refineries etc ...
Development seems to destroy instead of create...
WHO GETS THE BENEFIT OF ALL THESE "DEVELOPMENTS"?
ReplyDeleteSabah Oil and Gas Terminal, Sabah, Malaysia
"Sabah's capacity is equivalent to about 40% of Malaysia's crude oil production." (People lose land for roads construction etc & will get pollution in return and none of the profits).
The Sabah Oil and Gas Terminal (SOGT) is a part of the Sabah-Sarawak Integrated Oil and Gas Project undertaken by Petronas Carigali in the state of Sabah, in east Malaysia. The terminal will process oil and gas produced from the region's offshore fields.
The integrated project involves construction of an upstream infrastructure to tap offshore oil and gas reserves in the Sabah region and process the produced resources. It includes offshore field development, construction of the SOGT and a 512km onshore pipeline called the Sabah-Sarawak Gas Pipeline.
The new terminal is needed because crude oil terminal Labuan and natural gas terminal KG Gayang do not have sufficient capacity to handle oil and gas production from new fields.
The Sabah terminal is expected to be operational in 2014. It is designed to handle 300,000 barrels of oil per day and 1.25 billion cubic feet (bcf) of gas per day. Sabah's capacity is equivalent to about 40% of Malaysia's crude oil production.
The SOGT will serve the offshore fields developed as part of the Sabah-Sarawak Integrated Oil and Gas Project. The fields include Gumusut / Kakap, Kinabalu Deep and East, Kebabangan and Malikai.
Sabah site
The Sabah terminal is being built in a 250 acre greenfield site at Kimanis, a township that lies 45km from the city of Kota Kinabalu. The location is proximate to a number of Sabah offshore fields.
The nearby port at Bintulu may be used to export oil and condensate cargo from the terminal.
Contracts
Samsung Engineering was awarded the engineering, procurement, construction and commissioning (EPCC) contract. The MYR2.44bn ($770m) contract was signed in October 2010.
Samsung Engineering partnered with Malaysian construction company Naim Cendera (NCSB Engineering) to execute the project. Naim is responsible for the construction of support infrastructure such as roads, bridges, earthworks and site offices.
RNZ Integrated, a division of the RNZ Group, was involved in the design and engineering of the terminal between October 2006 and February 2009. KASI (Malaysia) conducted a comprehensive review of the design.
"Samsung Engineering was awarded the $770m EPCC contract."
The Sabah-Sarawak pipeline construction contract was awarded to a consortium of Punj Lloyd, Dialog E&C and Petrosab Logistik in 2008. The consortium will be led by Punj Lloyd.
Chemsain Konsultant carried out the environmental impact assessment and quantitative risk analysis (QRA) for the integrated project.
Construction of Sabah terminal
The proposal to build a new oil and gas terminal at Sabah was put forward in 2005.
Ground-breaking was held in February 2007 by the then Prime Minister of Malaysia, Dato' Seri Abdullah Haji Ahmad Badawi.
The Samsung-Naim joint venture expects to achieve mechanical completion of the terminal by December 2013.
Infrastructure
The terminal will be equipped with infrastructure to receive, process, store, measure and export crude oil and gas / condensate.
Subsea pipelines will be laid to connect the terminal with the offshore fields of the integrated project.
Processing at Sabah
"Sabah will be able to handle 300,000bopd."
The crude oil and gas / condensate reaching the Sabah terminal will be separated and stored in tanks. The gas will be sent to the Petronas LNG Complex in Bintulu via the Sabah-Sarawak pipeline, for processing and further export or sale.
The LNG complex has eight production trains with a total processing capacity of nearly 23 million tonnes of hydrocarbons per year.
The oil and condensate will be exported through moorings.
Pipeline route
The onshore pipeline will be 90km long in Sabah and 422km long in Sarawak. It will begin in Kimanis and end at Bintulu.