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Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Proposed carbon capture bill not applicable to Sabah, says Jeffrey

 


The proposed Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) Bill to be tabled in Parliament later this year will not be applicable to Sabah, said Deputy Chief Minister I Jeffrey Kitingan.

The state agriculture, fisheries and food industry minister said there was a clear separation of jurisdiction constitutionally, that both land and forestry matters were state matters under the State List and under the purview of the Sabah government.

He said Sabah had signed the necessary arrangement to generate a new source of income for the state from carbon credit sales from its two million hectares of tropical forests while preserving them.

“It’s not just preserving the rainforests but also providing much-needed funds and opportunities for the indigenous people in Sabah, and at the same time, complying with many of the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

“This (SDGs) includes no poverty, gender equality, clean water and sanitation, decent work and economic growth, reduced inequalities, protect and promote sustainable ecosystems, forests and halt biodiversity loss,” he said in a statement.

Sabah ‘well-advanced’

On May 21, Economy Minister Rafizi Ramli said his ministry had tabled a memorandum to the cabinet to pave the way towards a comprehensive legal framework on CCUS initiatives.

Rafizi said a standalone CCUS bill would be tabled by year-end while pushing for bilateral agreements amid significant progress made by the government in CCUS implementation.

Jeffrey said with its carbon reduction programme, Sabah was well advanced and well-positioned to take responsibility for its carbon credit potential under its own land and forestry laws with or without the proposed new CCUS laws.

Economy Minister Rafizi Ramli

“The state is in the process of enacting its own carbon capture and utilisation laws as well as updating the Forest Enactment 1968, including making carbon as a forest produce,” he said.

He said the socio-economic benefits of Sabah’s carbon credit programme was in line with the state’s vision of developing the Sabah Maju Jaya Development Plan 2021-2025.

The deputy chief minister said Sabah’s stand was in line with Sarawak, in that there was no necessity for the CCUS to be extended to the Borneo states.

This stand was made known to the National Climate Change Council meeting chaired by Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim in Putrajaya last Friday (June 14).

On May 23, Sarawak’s Deputy Energy and Environmental Sustainability Minister Hazland Abang Hipni said the proposed CCUS bill would not be applicable to the state, and the Sarawak government was of the view that state laws should govern the development of CCUS locally.

- Bernama

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