Monday, January 7, 2019
Friday, January 4, 2019
Green Living Activity Report: The Last Hurrah of 2018 -- A Forest Cleanup Party at the Bukit Gasing Educational Forest
Green Living Activity Report: The
Last Hurrah of 2018 -- A Forest Cleanup Party at the Bukit Gasing Educational
Forest
By Wong Ee Lynn <wongeelynn@yahoo.com>
MNS Selangor Branch’s Green
Living SIG organised a forest clean-up or ‘plogging party’ at the Bukit Gasing
Forest Reserve on 29 December 2018 and named the event “The Last Hurrah of
2018” as it was likely to be the final community cleanup of the year for most
of the participants. The purpose of the event was to get hikers and members of
the community to clean up the popular hiking and recreational spot as a way of
giving thanks to Mother Nature for all the good things that took place in 2018,
and to set good intentions for a more environmentally-responsible 2019.
A whopping 46 volunteers of all
ages, races, faiths and persuasions
showed up for the event and invested a lot of time and effort into
cleaning up Bukit Gasing. It was a very heartening and encouraging show of
civic consciousness and environmental awareness on the part of the volunteers.
Recyclables were separated and
the MBPJ truck arrived at the right time to remove all the sacks of rubbish. A
potluck picnic was held at the playground after the cleanup session and Lucky
Draw prizes were given out to 6 lucky participants.
Volunteers
wading through and removing litter from the streams.
2.
S Starting
them young and making volunteering a family affair!
3
Cikgu
Sazali brought his students to help out.
4
Tired
young volunteers sitting on the road in front of the Bukit Gasing water
treatment plant.
5
Getting
ready to haul the sacks of rubbish out.
6 Smile
and say GREEN!
7
Volunteers
Hari and Malathi (in green) who led the troops in.
8 One
of the Lucky Draw winners, Azizan, who did the entire plogging session with
baby in tow!
Special thanks go to Hari Shanmugam and Malathi Chandran for assisting Green Living with the recce and for leading the volunteers safely in and out of the trails, and to Fashilah Ahmad for sourcing and bringing the discarded gunny sacks for the rubbish. For and on behalf of Mother Nature and MNS Selangor, my heartfelt thanks go out to all the volunteers who gave up their Saturday morning to give back to Mother Nature.
Labels:
Activity Report,
Community,
Volunteering
Sunday, December 30, 2018
Letter to the Editor: Much Still Needs To Be Done To Protect Environment
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
MUCH STILL NEEDS TO BE DONE TO PROTECT ENVIRONMENT
The Malaysian Nature Society (MNS) Selangor Branch would
like to congratulate the Minister of Energy, Science, Technology, Environment
and Climate Change YB Yeo Bee Yin on being recognised as one of Nature
Journal’s top ten people who made a difference to the environment in 2018 (TheStar, 20 Dec 2018).
MNS Selangor along with other local environmental
organisations have long lobbied the Malaysian government for better energy,
water, land and waste management policies, and stronger laws against single-use
plastics.
While we are heartened by YB Yeo’s pledge to phase
out single-use plastics in Malaysia, we are concerned that the 12-year timeline
is simply too long to be effective in dealing with an issue as urgent as marine
plastic pollution. Kenya took drastic action to ban plastic bags over a year
ago, while Bali is set to ban plastic bags and other single-use plastics by
next year. Malaysia should not be lagging behind our neighbours in taking
decisive action to cut down on the manufacturing, consumption, use,
distribution and disposal of single-use plastics. This is especially so after
we have witnessed how inadequate our recycling and waste management systems are
in dealing with the world’s plastic waste that was foisted on Banting, Klang
and other Malaysian towns following China’s refusal to accept any more plastic
waste from developed nations for recycling. A 5-year roadmap would be a better
testimony of the government’s seriousness and sincerity in dealing with the
issue of single-use plastics and plastic pollution.
Much more needs to be done to conserve Malaysia’s
environment, biodiversity, wildlife and natural resources, and unfortunately we
have not seen very much concrete action or moral courage on the part of the
relevant authorities, enforcement agencies and government ministries. The Ministry
of Housing and Local Government, Ministry of Energy, Science, Technology,
Environment and Climate Change (MESTECC), Ministry of Works and Ministry of
Water, Land and Natural Resources have been conspicuously and alarmingly
silent, for instance, on the issue of hill slope development in Penang, the encroachment
into native customary lands by plantation companies, and the clearing of green
lungs for development projects in Taman Bukit Kiara and Bukit Lagong, among
others.
The issues of the degazettement of forest reserves,
deforestation and development and infrastructure projects in previously
forested areas should not fall within the purview of State governments or the
Ministry of Federal Territories alone. It is not enough to say that a
particular piece of land is under state ownership and management, and the
public or other government ministries and agencies are therefore not authorised
to discuss, question or challenge any development plans in green lungs and
forest reserves. It is not enough to claim that the cost of cancellation or
need for housing are too high, and therefore environmental protection must be
relegated to the back burner. It is not enough to argue that the issue of
deforestation and degazettement of forest reserves fall within the purview of
the Forestry Department and the Ministry of Water, Land and Natural Resources,
as deforestation has an impact on climate change and should therefore be inconsistent
with MESTECC’s climate change mitigation policies.
Deforestation and development projects in forested
areas, especially ecologically sensitive areas with high biodiversity and high
conservation value, affect more than just the value of neighbouring properties.
Increased disasters such as landslides, flash floods, and drought, and
increased air, water, noise and light pollution, will have an adverse impact on
climate and environmental quality, and will affect human and animal quality of
life and a particular community and ecosystem’s ability to sustain itself.
Wildlife populations may end up unable to breed, find food, or avoid conflict
with humans. Highway and development projects may end up bisecting or
fragmenting wildlife habitats and lead to an increase in wildlife roadkills.
New roads and highways may create access for illegal loggers and poachers where
there was none before.
The degazettement of forest reserves and destruction
of the natural environment are taking place on the watch of those entrusted to
protect the environment. Those of us in environmental organisations are fully
aware of the need to balance environmental protection with economic needs.
However, in many instances, there is no actual pressing social or economic need
resulting in a genuine conflict, and there should be no compromise on
environmental protection. For far too long, the Malaysian authorities have been
defending environmentally destructive projects that benefit only a selected few
with economic and political leverage. Environmental organisations and citizens’
action groups with no ulterior motives or hidden agendas other than to speak up
for the natural environment are treated as adversaries, instead of as valuable
and impartial allies. Hill slope development is clearly dangerous,
unsustainable and indefensible especially after so many disasters and loss of
lives, yet hill slope development projects continue to be approved. The
continued destruction and acquisition of native customary lands and the
oppression of indigenous communities by corporations, developers and plantation
owners cannot be allowed to proceed unchecked. The gazettement of forest
reserves becomes meaningless if degazettement and forest-clearing can take
place at any time with impunity.
All of us have only a small window of time to help
protect natural spaces and vanishing species. Politicians’ windows of time are
even smaller. While praise and credit must be given where it is due, we must
remember that environmental conservation in Malaysia is an uphill battle and
many issues are not afforded the urgency and importance they deserve. We need
to prioritise the environmental challenges with the highest stakes and greatest
potential for lasting and irreversible damage. Environmental organisations are
always ready to meet with the government to discuss solutions. Environmental
organisations are not trying to win a popularity contest against governmental
agencies, we are racing against time to prevent the annihilation of the natural
world. It is wonderful that Malaysia has a Minister acknowledged by a
prestigious science journal to be a champion for the environment. It would be
more wonderful still if we could have all the relevant government ministries
work together with each other and with environmental organisations and
citizens’ action groups to expeditiously and courageously take action to
protect Malaysia’s natural environment and deliver environmental justice.
WONG EE LYNN
MALAYSIAN NATURE SOCIETY
SELANGOR BRANCH
Labels:
Advocacy,
Community,
Letter to the Editor,
Waste Management
Thursday, December 6, 2018
Friday, November 23, 2018
Letter to the Editor: No Development Should Take Place In Bukit Lagong Forest Reserve
LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
NO DEVELOPMENT SHOULD TAKE PLACE IN BUKIT LAGONG FOREST RESERVE
It is with alarm that environmentalists and concerned citizens learned today of the proposed degazettement and development of parts of the Bukit Lagong Forest Reserve in Gombak.
Bukit Lagong provides more than just recreational and ecotourism value to the Selangor State Government, residents and visitors. Forests such as the Bukit Lagong Forest Reserve provide multiple ecosystem services, such as carbon sequestration, flood protection, air quality improvement and water purification. Healthy trees absorb solar energy and release water vapour, thus regulating climate and temperature. Intact forests safeguard biodiversity, protect human health, and mitigate climate change.
There is irrefutable data, including from various studies conducted by the World Bank, Wildlife Conservation Society, and Wetlands International, to support the assertion that forests are worth much more intact than when depleted, logged or converted into plantations. The economic returns of forest clearing for logging or development are short lived and can sustain only 1-2 generations at most.
While the Selangor State Government’s action of calling for feedback and opening the proposed development for public inspection is an encouraging indication of greater transparency and participatory democracy, it must be emphasised that the opinion of the citizens, engineering professionals and the scientific and conservation community must also be taken into account, whether or not they have locus standi to object to the proposed development. Further, the feedback and objections from the public must be thoroughly considered, addressed and acted upon, not merely collected and then filed away to create the impression of civic participation.
Any proposed development in an ecologically sensitive area with high conservation and high biodiversity value will adversely affect more than just people living in the immediate vicinity of the site. The clearing of forests for roads and construction will increase air and water pollution and the risk of soil erosion and landslides. The destruction of watershed areas will affect the entire state’s water supply and water quality. The opening up of access roads will create access not only for the construction vehicles, but also illegal loggers, poachers and wildlife traffickers. The construction of roads will fragment and bisect wildlife habitats, and the increase in traffic will result in wildlife deaths and wildlife-human conflict. The increase in motor vehicles and fossil fuel use in the area will contaminate the soil and groundwater with fuel runoffs. The clearing of trees will raise carbon dioxide emissions and reduce air quality. All these actions will affect more than just local residents. The damage to the environment will be irreversible, and yet those most severely affected by the destruction – namely, the trees and wildlife – have no suffrage and are unable to put in their written objections.
The state government and developers have a duty of care not only to the local residents, but to all the living beings present and future who will foreseeably be harmed by the proposed development project. The well-being of the local human residents is interconnected with that of the local flora and fauna and even entities such as rivers and forests.
The most preposterous thing about this proposed housing development project in Bukit Lagong is the fact that it is so patently wasteful and unnecessary. There is no shortage of viable housing development sites in Selangor. A study in June 2018 found that there are over 34,532 unsold completed residential units in Malaysia. Abandoned projects and lacklustre existing housing projects can be revived, improved and put back on the market. The advantage to reviving abandoned housing projects in urban and suburban areas is that there will often already be existing transportation, waste management and drainage infrastructure and systems, thus reducing the environmental and economic cost of providing housing.
The proposed housing development project in Bukit Lagong is clearly not designed to meet the housing needs of the poorest and neediest, but to create an exclusive enclave for homebuyers who can afford the luxury of having a home in the heart of nature. The unfortunate cost of the privilege of living next to a forest reserve is that roads, sewage systems and waste management systems will have to be put in where there were none before, thus creating an additional burden on an already strained natural space. If the goals of proposed housing projects were to improve human quality of life, then such projects would be focused in urban areas close to amenities and infrastructures. The question of balancing environmental conservation and meeting human needs for adequate housing does not arise in this situation at all.
The proposed Bukit Lagong development project must be immediately and irrevocably scrapped. It can benefit only an elite few but will harm a great many in the long run. I urge all concerned members of the public, whether or not you are residing in the vicinity of Bukit Lagong, to write in to the Director of the Selangor Forestry Department at Level 3, Bangunan Sultan Salahuddin Abdul Aziz Shah, 40660 Shah Alam, Selangor, to politely and firmly state your objections to this irresponsible and indefensible proposal to degazette and develop the Bukit Lagong Forest Reserve.
WONG EE LYNN
MALAYSIAN NATURE SOCIETY
Thursday, October 25, 2018
Letter to the Editor: Hill Slope Development Comes With Many Environmental Risks
LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
HILL SLOPE DEVELOPMENT COMES WITH MANY ENVIRONMENTAL RISKS
The Bukit Kukus landslide tragedy is a grim reminder that hill slope development comes with many environmental and safety risks. Hill slope development causes erosion, habitat loss and air, water and noise pollution. It threatens wildlife, forests, water security, and soil integrity and stability.
The Malaysian Cabinet had already drawn up a set of guidelines in 2009 prohibiting development on, inter alia, slopes exceeding 35 degrees, and slopes between 15-35 degrees showing signs of soil instability, erosion or other vulnerabilities. The Bukit Kukus tragedy involved an elevated road on a hill slope with a gradient reported to be 60-90 degrees.
The authorities are not unaware of the risks arising from, or the laws and guidelines in place in relation to, hill slope development. The guidelines include the National Slope Master Plan 2009 – 2023 issued by the Public Works Department, while the laws include the Land Conservation Act 1960, Environmental Quality Act 1974, Town and Country Planning Act 1976, and Street, Drainage and Building Act 1974. This clearly shows that there is no shortage of studies, guidelines, regulations and laws in Malaysia pertaining to hill slope development. What is lacking is the political will to enforce these laws and guidelines and to ensure the safety of people and the environment or the sustainability of the project.
Blaming a massive landslide on rainy weather is irresponsible. Clearly the tragedy is not caused by merely rain and gravity, but corruption, apathy, irresponsibility and a willingness to cut corners and create wiggle room where there should be none. Intact land does not just spontaneously break off and descend on homes and roads when saturated with rainwater. If that were the case, then entire mountain ranges would be flattened annually during the monsoon season.
Fatal landslides in Malaysia keep recurring because local and state authorities are willing to approve development projects on hill slopes, especially when given the assurance that mitigation measures, no matter how minimal and negligible, would be taken. However, no retaining wall or terrace can mitigate the adverse effects of deforestation, destruction of watershed areas, overdevelopment and mining, quarrying and construction activities near slopes.
The Highland Towers collapse in 1993, Bukit Antarabangsa landslide in 2008, Hulu Langat landslide in 2011 and Tanjung Bungah landslide in 2017 all precede this latest incident, but decision-makers responded with words of regret and sympathy when strong policies and strict enforcement would have been more effective and would have prevented further tragedies. A prohibition on hill slope development on slopes exceeding a certain gradient should be treated as such, and not merely as a temporary freeze on hill slope development until public outrage simmers down.
No development or construction activity should ever take place at a site in which the state and local authorities are unable to guarantee full compliance with safety guidelines or criteria. The profits to be gained from authorizing hill slope development work are paid for by construction workers and local residents with their safety and lives. Wildlife, rivers, forests and other natural entities pay the price with their existence.
There must be a nationwide moratorium on all hill slope development. Existing projects must be reviewed, mitigation measures carried out and laws strictly and transparently enforced. The parties responsible for this fatal landslide must be held to account. Previously forested areas that had been cleared for hill slope development must be rehabilitated. The cost of hill slope development on the environment and communities is simply too high to be justified any longer.
WONG EE LYNN
COORDINATOR,
GREEN LIVING SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP,
MALAYSIAN NATURE SOCIETY
Wednesday, September 26, 2018
Letter to the Editor: Illegal Plastic Recycling Factories Highlight Need For Real Solutions
LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
ILLEGAL PLASTIC RECYCLING FACTORIES
HIGHLIGHT NEED FOR REAL SOLUTIONS
New Zealand news portal RadioNZ’s recent
exposé of the illegal plastic recycling industry in Jenjarom and other
plantation hinterlands in Malaysia to deal with plastic waste imported from New
Zealand and the UK highlights the fact that most of the world, including
developed nations with ostensibly clear waste management and recycling
legislation, are ill-equipped to deal with plastic waste.
The irony of this fact (i.e. the import
and processing of plastic waste in Malaysia) is not lost on
environmentally-aware Malaysians who applauded Energy, Science, Technology,
Environment and Climate Change Minister Yeo Bee Yin’s latest announcement on
Sept 14 that Malaysia would be phasing out and eventually banning single-use
plastics.
All our efforts to reduce plastic waste
and microplastic pollution would translate into very low environmental and
health returns if plastic recyclers – mostly unlicensed and unregulated – are
allowed to carry out operations and continue processing plastic waste that had
entered Malaysia prior to the Minister’s Sept 1 announcement of a restriction
on plastic waste imports.
The plastics manufacturing industry
tries to convince the public that littering, ignorance about recycling and lack
of recycling facilities – and not the production of plastics per se – are the
problem.
But the real problem is that we are using
a lot more plastics and generating a lot more waste as the world is becoming
more industrialised. The World Economic Forum reports that we use 20 times as
much plastics as we did 50 years ago. Businesses create more and more
single-use plastics to meet consumers’ expectations for convenience, and most
of these plastics can never be recycled.
Plastic recycling is a labour-intensive
process. Plastic waste has to be broken down, cleaned, separated by grade and
made into pellets. This means that manufacturing plastic from scratch is always
more economically rewarding than recycling plastics, even with subsidies and recycling-related
legislation in place.
Developed nations often believe that
legislating and incentivizing recycling and collecting plastics for recycling
is the same thing as ensuring that plastics are being properly recycled. What
the general public often is not aware of is that developed nations take the
easy option of exporting plastic waste to developing nations --- the very same
developing nations whose rivers are identified as the source of 90% of marine
plastics, the very same developing nations lacking sufficient infrastructure to
manage their own plastic waste.
It could take years for Britain, USA and
European nations to increase their domestic recycling capacities. Even so,
existing recycling technology isn’t good enough, largely because of limitations
in how plastics can be sorted by chemical composition and cleaned of additives.
Most plastics that are recycled are shredded and reprocessed into lower-value
plastics, such as polyester carpet fibre. Only 2% are recycled into products of
the same quality.
In the meantime, more and more plastic
products will continue to be produced, used and discarded, and many countries
will resort to burning plastics for energy recovery or landfilling plastic
waste. However, burning plastic creates harmful dioxins, and if incinerators
are inefficient, these dioxins leak into the environment. Burning plastic for
energy generation is also very carbon-intensive and contribute to increased
carbon emissions. Burying plastic waste in landfills may appear to be safer but
this is a really inefficient use of land, and studies have found that the
degradation of plastic waste in oceans and landfills actually produce methane
and ethylene, both potent greenhouse gases.
The solution to the problem of plastic
waste doesn’t lie in recycling more, or replacing plastics with other types of
disposable packaging. Biodegradable packaging is linked to other environmental
problems, which include increased carbon and methane emissions in landfills,
deforestation, higher water and land use, and higher fuel use due to the fact
that paper and plant fibre products weigh more than plastics.
The solution to the problem of plastic
waste lies not in setting up yet more licensed and legal plastic recycling
plants in Malaysia and other developing nations, as there will always be
unrecyclable and contaminated plastic waste and toxic byproducts to deal with. The
solution does not lie in individual countries banning the import of plastic
waste in order to protect their own population from reduced air quality and
other environmental hazards, as there will be other developing nations and
impoverished societies desperate enough to accept imports of plastic waste.
The solution lies in creating a circular
economy that does not rely on shipping materials across oceans to be reused,
but keeps resources in use for as long as possible in the economic cycle. The
solution to the problems of plastic waste lie in reducing dependency on all
single-use and disposable items, creating more closed loop and low-waste
systems, creating and sustaining a bigger market for reusables, and making zero
waste stores and products available, accessible and affordable to all, not just
to higher income, urban, educated and expatriate communities.
The Malaysian Government is taking a
step in the right direction by raising awareness, phasing out single-use
plastics, enforcing laws against open burning, banning the import of plastic
waste and regulating the plastics recycling industry. What we need now is for
the Malaysian public to stop treating environmental issues as political or
economic issues, and to instead understand that environmental and human health are
interconnected. What we need now is to stop seeing the problem of plastic waste
management as the fault of high-consuming, affluent developed nations, or the
fault of developing nations with high corruption levels and flawed waste
management systems – and to start seeing it as a shared responsibility.
WONG EE LYNN
COORDINATOR,
GREEN LIVING SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP,
MALAYSIAN NATURE SOCIETY
Labels:
Letter to the Editor,
Plastics,
Waste Management
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