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10 APRIL 2024

Thursday, February 10, 2011

NGOs: No such thing as ‘clean’ coal plant

Stop misleading the public, environmentalists tell government and Tenaga Nasional

KOTA KINABALU: A coalition of NGOs here have questioned the government’s persistent branding of a proposed coal plant in Sabah as ‘clean’ given that no such facility exists in the world.

They also warned that any further attempt to force a coal plant in Sabah will close the doors to development of renewable energy in a state that is producing tonnes of biomass from oil palm waste but not utilising it for the purpose.

The group also took a swipe at the state and federal government for trying to brand Sabah as a biodiversity and ecotourism hub while at the same time introducing an environment-damaging industry into the state.

Green SURF (Sabah Unite to Re-Power the Future) said that the propounded aims of the government and its practices are in direct conflict with each other.

The coalition said the state has the potential to attract funds for clean energy options but is doing everything to stifle such a cutting-edge industry.

“The term clean coal should refer only to the idea of building coal plants that capture carbon emissions and then store the carbon underground.

“The government and Tenaga Nasional Berhad must stop misleading the public. This is a dream for the future, not a present reality. No plant of this kind exists in the world yet.

“The Sabah plant, like every other coal plant in the world, will not be able to capture and store carbon. At best, reports show such a facility will only come on stream in 2030.

“Having basic controls on emissions of certain gases and on wastewater does not make a coal plant ‘clean’.

“What those proposing the plant seem to be talking about when they talk about ‘clean coal’ is the fact that the plant will have certain pollution control devices that minimises the release of pollutants other than carbon dioxide,” the group said in a statement.

No stringent enough laws

Green SURF said it decided to highlight the issue of clean coal technology as repeated statements had been made on the matter by the Energy, Water and Green Technology Ministry, apart from Tenaga Nasional Berhad and Lahad Datu Energy Sdn Bhd.

Past reports state that the proposed project will use clean coal technology.

“Removing sulphur dioxide, a compound that causes acid rain and use of low nitrous oxide burners, among other measures, do not merit calling the plant a ‘clean’ one.

“These measures only partially control the release of pollutants they are designed to control and do not do anything about carbon dioxide emissions.

“In no way does the inclusion of standard and usually legally-required features merit calling the power facility in Sabah a ‘clean coal’ type. In Malaysia, we do not have the necessary stringent laws that restrict such pollution.”

The fact that the government has not publicly scrapped the idea of building a 300-megawatt coal-fired power plant in Lahad Datu, they said, means it will go ahead despite objections.

Green SURF said the Credit Suisse Group has estimated US$15 billion (about RM45 billion) needs to be invested in carbon capture and storage technology, while the Pew Center on Global Climate Change has stated the cost could be as high as US$30 billion (about RM90 billion).

A TIME Magazine article on Jan 10, 2009 entitled ‘Exposing the Myth of Clean Coal Power’, stressed that there is currently no inexpensive or economical way to capture and sequester carbon emissions from coal and that experts doubt there will ever be.

Increase in cancer risk

Numerous reports have also pointed out that the cost of generating power from coal using carbon capture technology will be significantly higher.

“The cost and energy just to produce ‘clean coal’ would make using coal just or more expensive than using wind, solar and other renewables.

“We must also remember that coal can never be clean for as long as it involves removing mountains, displacing local communities in the mining process, and polluting their environment,” it noted.

Green SURF also pointed out that the US Environmental Protection Agency had reported that coal ash, a solid by product of burned coal which contains arsenic could contribute to an increase in cancer cases by several hundred times.

The group further warned that escalating global food prices which are also impacting Malaysia, were to a certain extent caused by climate change, and one report has estimated changes in weather could cause prices to go up by 20 per cent within the decade.

“Scientists say 350 parts per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is the safe limit for humanity, and that is why Green SURF is here. We want to play our part in bringing the level of carbon dioxide down from its present 389 parts per million.”

Green SURF was set up over a year ago following the announcement by the Federal Government that a 300-megawatt coal plant would be built in Kampung Sinakut, Lahad Datu.

The coalition’s founding members are WWF Malaysia, Land Empowerment Animals People (LEAP), Sabah Environment Protection Association (SEPA), Partners of Community Organisations (PACOS) and the Malaysian Nature Society (MNS) Sabah branch. - FMT

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