Showing posts with label Malaysia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Malaysia. Show all posts

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Malaysia News: Malaysian palm oil giant tied to social conflict, deforestation, says report (11 April 2014)

Malaysian palm oil giant tied to social conflict, deforestation, says report

Source: Mongabay.com
Published on 3rd April, 2014
Borneo rainforest
Rainforest conversion for an oil palm plantation in Malaysia 
Unlike other palm oil giants that have recently made strong commitments to eliminating deforestation and social conflict from their supply chains, Malaysia-based Kuala Lumpur Kepong (KLK) continues to source palm oil associated with forest destruction and community conflict, argues a new report published by the Rainforest Action Network (RAN).

The report, titled Conflict Palm Oil in Practice, cites several high profile cases from the past year involving KLK, including conflict with communities in Papua New Guinea and Liberia, use of child labor on an Indonesian plantation, and continued deforestation at two plantations in Indonesia. 

“The sheer magnitude of the abuse that KLK has engaged in is shocking,” said Robin Averbeck, senior forest campaigner with Rainforest Action Network. “From Liberia to Indonesia to Papua New Guinea, KLK is involved in everything from the destruction of endangered orangutan habitat to widespread child labor and the violation of the rights of Indigenous Peoples.” 

Deforestation for palm oil in Malaysia 

Deforestation for palm oil in Malaysia
Deforestation for palm oil in Malaysia 

The report aims to pressure American firms that buy from KLK to drop the company as a supplier. One of KLK’s major buyers, Wilmar, recently established a zero deforestation policy that would seem to compel it
to stop doing business with the palm oil producer. But Cargill, a KLK buyer that has been the target of a long-running RAN campaign, has no such policy. 

“KLK is able to continue to operate with impunity while major traders, like Cargill, continue to purchase the palm oil it produces to sell to food manufacturers in the United States and around the world,” noted Averbeck. 

Deforestation for palm oil in Malaysia
Deforestation for palm oil in Malaysian Borneo 

RAN’s hope is that convincing major traders to stop buying from KLK could push the company to adopt a zero deforestation, zero conflict policy like those established by Golden Agri-Resources in 2011 and Wilmar in 2013. 

Palm oil production is currently the biggest driver of deforestation in Indonesia and Malaysia. 

Read more at http://news.mongabay.com/2014/0402-klk-conflict-palm-oil.html#EjuYfk4rFSg2QYEG.99

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Malaysia News: Rivers of filth and garbage (11 April 2014)

Rivers of filth and garbage

Source: The Star
Published on 7th April, 2014 by P. ARUNA
Awash in trash: Rubbish such as polystyrene and plastic bags clogging a river trash trap across the Klang River near Jalan Ipoh, Kuala Lumpur. -AZMAN GHANI / The Star
Awash in trash: Rubbish such as polystyrene and plastic bags clogging a river trash trap across the Klang River near Jalan Ipoh, Kuala Lumpur. -AZMAN GHANI / The Star
KUALA LUMPUR: About 300,000 tonnes of garbage, enough to fill 110 Olympic-sized swimming pools, are being dumped into rivers yearly and the constant pollution is adding to the prolonged water shortage.
Besides the usual floating rubbish tied in plastic bags and polystyrene food containers, the Drainage and Irrigation Department (DID) has also found all sorts of junk, including old fridges, discarded mattresses and kitchen utensils, in rivers.
According to the department’s river basin and coastal management division director, Datuk Lim Chow Hock, the recent dry spell had reduced the volume of water in rivers, making the water quality even worse.
“When there is less water content, the quality gets worse as dilution of the pollutants is not possible. Pollution is a contributing factor to the current water shortage,” he said.
Lim said that although the main reason for the shortage was the extended dry spell, polluted rivers meant less water could be pumped into the treatment plants.
“If there is an oil spill for example, the cost to treat the water at the plant will be extremely high. If there are toxic elements in the water, the cost of production will shoot up and our plants would not be able to handle this, resulting in supply being affected,” he said.
Pollution has already led to five rivers – Sungai Segget and Sungai Ayer Merah in Johor, and Sungai Jelutong, Sungai Juru and Sungai Prai in Penang – being classified as “dead” as they are unable to sustain any form of life, including fish and aquatic plants.


But the dirtiest river in the country, in terms of the amount of rubbish found, is the 120km-long Sungai Klang. An estimated 77,000 tonnes of garbage are dumped into it each year.
The Federal Government has allocated RM4bil to clean up Sungai Klang and its tributaries under the 10-year River of Life (ROL) project, which began last year.
Its targets include the installation of 69 gross pollutant traps (GPTs) by Kuala Lumpur City Hall and another 359 GPTs, log booms and trash rakes by the DID.
GPTs are filters that catch pollutants before they enter waterways. The six categories of pollutants found in rivers are rubbish from housing and squatter areas, construction waste, silt from land clearing, oil and grease from restaurants, sullage or organic waste, mostly from wet markets, and industrial waste from factories and workshops.
Lim said many people felt that they were not responsible for river pollution if they did not throw rubbish directly into the rivers.
“But they do not realise that the rubbish they discard by the roadsides also ends up in the drains and then in the rivers,” he said, adding that the discharge of raw sewage into rivers was also a problem in some small old towns.
source from: http://thegreenreporter.wordpress.com/2014/04/10/rivers-of-filth-and-garbage/

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Malaysia News: Toxic tides: Risks from harmful microalgae (7 April 2014)

Toxic tides: Risks from harmful microalgae

Harmful algal bloom, or red tide, off Sabah.
Harmful algal bloom, or red tide, off Sabah.
   
There is a need to step up monitoring of our coastal waters for harmful algal blooms as they pose public safety concerns and economic risks.
ON the morning of Feb 11, fish farm operators in Tanjung Kupang, Johor, woke up to the ghastly sight of fish floating belly up in their pens in the Straits of Johor. In the days that followed, the fish kept dying.
The fish kill lasted two weeks, at the end of which commercially valuable stocks of snappers, estuary cods, seabass and threadfins in some nine farms were wiped out. One operator reported losses of RM150,000.
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The mass mortality has since been blamed on a harmful algal bloom (HAB), or what is commonly referred to as red tide, a sudden population explosion of a toxin-producing microalgae.
While HABs are not often reported in Peninsular Malaysia, Sabah is no stranger to the phenomenon. Its first HAB was reported in 1976 and this has been a fairly annual occurrence since. In January and February last year, shellfish poisoning claimed three lives and over 40 people fell ill in Sepanggar and Inanam, both near Kota Kinabalu, in the state’s worst case of HAB.
In fact, the Sabah Fisheries Department has not lifted its red tide alert which it had issued in October 2011. In January, following the sighting of reddish-brown waters off Kota Kinabalu, director Rayner Stuel Galid said the red tide warning was still in effect and the toxins which were detected for eight months of last year continued to be seen from Tuaran to Kuala Penyu.
These incidents of HABs may be signs of what’s to come. According to Universiti Malaya marine ecologist Dr Lim Po Teen, HABs are occurring more frequently and in more locations over the past decade, and involve previously unknown species.
Depending on the species, a sudden bloom of microalgae can turn sea water red, white, green, cloudy or foamy.
Depending on the species, a sudden bloom of microalgae can turn sea water red, white, green, cloudy or foamy.
In the Tanjung Kupang case, the offensive microalgae was identified as Karlodinium australe, which caught scientists by surprise. “This is the first time we are seeing a bloom of this species, which has never been reported as toxic,” says Dr Leaw Chui Pin, a marine molecular biologist who has worked on harmful microalgae for 14 years.
She says researchers conducted water sampling 10 days after the fish die-offs first happened, yet they still found a high density of the organism, between one million to two million per litre. She notes that the bloom affected even big fishes. Samples will be sent to their Japanese collaborators to measure the amount of toxins in the dead fish.
Leaw says scientists have characterised 40 species of harmful and potentially harmful microalgae in Malaysia, and foresee there may be more in our waters.
Water sampling in the Straits of Johor confirmed a bloom of the microalgae Karlodinium australe during the fish kills in Tanjung Kupang, Johor.
Water sampling in the Straits of Johor confirmed a bloom of the microalgae Karlodinium australe during the fish kills in Tanjung Kupang, Johor.
Noxious effects
Until 1990, problems related to paralytic shellfish poisoning were confined to the west coast of Sabah. In early 1991, it was recorded for the first time in Peninsular Malaysia when three people became ill after eating farmed mussels from Sebatu, Malacca. It was only years later that Alexandrium tamiyanavichi was confirmed as the toxin producer. Since then, HABs have been reported in various parts of the peninsula.
Microalgae inflict harm when they produce toxins which cause fish kills or which accumulate in shellfish, causing paralytic shellfish poisoning when the contaminated seafood is consumed by humans or marine mammals. Fish kills happen when the microalgae produce toxins which attack fish gills. This stalls the transportation of oxygen through the gills, hence suffocating the fish. Some toxins irritate the gills, triggering secretion of mucous which also lead to suffocation.
In 2001, six people in  Tumpat, Kelantan, were hospitalised and one of them died, after consuming shellfish contaminated with toxin from Alexandrium minutum.
In 2001, six people in  Tumpat, Kelantan, were hospitalised and one of them died, after consuming shellfish contaminated with toxin from Alexandrium minutum.
Scientists say the term “red tide” is misleading as HABs do not just paint the water red; some turn the water cloudy, brown or foamy. The discolouration in the water is most visible in the morning. As the day warms up, the mass of microalgae will sink down to avoid extreme heat.
Not all algae blooms are harmful – even if it is red in colour. In Lumut, Perak and Penang, there have been blooms of Ceratium furca, which does not produce toxins although it has the characteristic red tide effect.
However, blooms of non-toxic microalgae can lead to fish die-offs too as the decomposition of the large mass can deplete the water of oxygen, creating hypoxic or anoxic conditions.
The sudden proliferation of microalgae is triggered by enrichment of waters (what is called eutrophication).
The increase in nutrients comes from land-based discharges such as fertiliser-laden runoffs from plantations and livestock farms, and sewage effluent.
“Harmful algal blooms are always related to increased activities in coastal areas,” says Lim, head of UM’s Bachok Marine Research Station in Kelantan.
Fuelling the growth
Natural upwelling can also release long-buried organic matter which enriches the water. Seabed dredging can also have the same effect. Lim points out that the algal bloom in Sabah last year coincided with the laying of water pipes on the sea bed between Kota Kinabalu and Pulau Gaya. Similarly, there was land reclamation work near the fish farms in Tanjung Kupang during the HAB.
Another source of coastal water enrichment is caged fish culture, especially when trash fish is used as feed.
“Any uneaten fish will quickly sink to the bottom and cause eutrophication. It is better to use feed that can stay suspended in the water column, instead of sinking very fast,” says Lim, who has researched on microalgae for 14 years.
Algae blooms tend to occur in sheltered places with restricted water movements, such as lagoons, ports and embayments. Sarawak does not have major problems with algae blooms due to strong tidal action which flushes the coastal waters.
Lim notes that shipping can transport harmful microalgae to distant places. This happens when ballast water, which may contain non-native species, is indiscriminately released in a foreign port. He says the species – Pyrodinium bahamense – that had caused paralytic shellfish poisoning in Sabah last year, has since been found at two sites in Peninsular Malaysia.
No paralytic shellfish poisoning was reported from Port Dickson, but Kuantan had one incident in November, although there was no fatality.
This species is very toxic and has always posed a problem for Sabah.
Because of its long history of red tides, the Sabah Fisheries Department has put in place surveillance of HABs. It involves regular water sampling and testing of molluscs and fish. If tests show over 400 mouse unit of the toxin per 100g of tissue, the shellfish cannot be sold.
No red tide warnings have ever been issued in Peninsular Malaysia since monitoring is almost non-existent and awareness on HABs, low. To avert the harmful and economically damaging effects of HABs, Lim says monitoring of our coastal waters has to be stepped up.
Currently, there is insufficient HAB scrutiny in peninsular Malaysia, partly due to the lack of trained personnel. As such, the Science, Technology and Innovation Ministry and local scientists have organised training workshops on water sampling methods and identification of harmful microalgae (see note below).
Keep a lookout
Lim says more locations should be monitored, particularly sites with previously known HABs and those with fish and shellfish farms. One such place is Kuala Selangor, which has one of the largest cockle beds in the country.
He says the toxin-producing Gymnodinum catenatum has been detected there, although in low numbers.
This species can cause paralytic shellfish poisoning, but this has not been seen in Sabah, where it can also be found.
Our small and scattered seafood culture industry, however, is proving difficult to monitor. “The shellfish industry in New Zealand is big, so the producers there can afford to pay for regular testing. On the other hand, the value of mussels here is low, so how can the farmers pay for tests?” says Lim.
He asserts, though, that monitoring is crucial to ensure the safety of our seafood products for local consumption and export. In fact, Singapore has stopped imports of cockles from Kuala Selangor, citing a lack of proper monitoring of seafood safety. Fish farm operators should be aware of HABs in order to minimise risks. Lim says selection of mariculture sites based on previously known HABs cases and the ability to predict HABs will help them avoid unwanted losses. Sites with no record of potential harmful species and good water exchanges are preferable.
In a 2009 study on the Straits of Johor, researchers from Universiti Malaysia Sarawak and the Fisheries Research Institute found 11 microalgae species, with seven associated with blooms and harmful either as fish killers or toxin producers. The presence of these potentially harmful species should be considered in future expansion of aquaculture industry in the straits.
If a bloom does happen, fish farm operators can use plastic sheet skirtings to prevent the fish from direct contact with the harmful microalgae. In Japan, the use of moveable pens has been helpful. In the long run, however, the problem of enrichment of coastal waters has to be looked at.
“It all comes down to what we do on land,” says Dr Lim. A well-informed public will help ensure public safety. Once a warning on HAB has been announced, the public should avoid shellfish in the affected area. Symptoms of poisoning are seen within 30 to 60 minutes of consuming contaminated seafood.
The immediate signs are numbness or tingling of the lips and tongue, which spreads to the fingers and toes. Other symptoms are a sensation of lightness, salivation, intense thirst and temporary blindness. These symptoms are followed by a loss of muscular coordination, terminating in paralysis as well as inability to breathe. There is no known antidote for paralytic shellfish poisoning, so treatment is supportive, such as artificial respiration.
There will be a workshop on Systematic and Advanced Methodologies in Harmful Algae Monitoring on Aug 12-15 at the Bachok Marine Research Station in Bachok, Kelantan. The workshop is targeted at fisheries personnel and aquaculture farm operators. It will introduce new monitoring technology, techniques in field samplings, skills in qualitative and quantitive analyses, and options for future monitoring programmes.
The workshop is organised by the National Oceanography Directorate, the Science, Technology and Innovation Ministry, and Universiti Malaya. For more information, e-mail cpleaw@um.edu.my or ptlim@um.edu.my.
source from: http://www.thestar.com.my/News/Environment/2014/04/07/Toxic-tides-Risks-from-harmful-microalgae/

Malaysia News: Water rationing takes toll on health, environment (13 April 2014)

MALAYSIA

Water rationing takes toll on health, environment

Water rationing has created a spike in the use of polystyrene plates and cups.. — Picture by Choo Choy May Water rationing has created a spike in the use of polystyrene plates and cups.. — Picture by Choo Choy May- See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/water-rationing-takes-toll-on-health-environment#sthash.9dYf5Ixc.dpuf
PETALING JAYA, April 13 — Residents of Klang Valley may whine and moan about the lack of water at home due to the rationing exercises but its impact goes beyond just their daily discomfort. - See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/water-rationing-takes-toll-on-health-environment#sthash.9dYf5Ixc.dpuf
The ongoing water rationing was brought on by an unusually long dry season, which is said to be caused by climate change.
In coping with it, people could just be making things worse for the environment and themselves. On top of the list is a spike in the use of polystyrene plates and cups to save water.
Deputy Natural Resources and Environment Minister, Datuk Dr James Dawos Mamit, said polystyrene affects people’s health as well as the environment.
He said polystyrene packaging should not be used in the first place, and encouraged businesses to switch to plates and cutleries made from oil palm trunk fibres as they were more eco-friendly and a biodegradable alternative.
He pointed out that the environmental ministry had conducted road shows to inform the public about the hazards of polystyrene, but the public does not seem to care.
- See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/water-rationing-takes-toll-on-health-environment#sthash.9dYf5Ixc.dpuf
“The public take food packaging for granted, which primarily affects their health and eventually, the environment,” he said.
Global Environment Centre River Care coordinator, Kalithasan Kailasam, said although it was good that businesses have thought of a short-term solution to deal with the water rationing, they need to look at the bigger picture.
He advised businesses to better plan their water storage to reduce the usage of disposable cutleries.
“Biodegradable cutleries are a better solution, but it is not the best as it still becomes waste,” he said.
Kalithasan also felt that one of the issues people have to deal with is not having enough clean water.
“People need to understand that rivers with high concentration of pollutants cannot be treated and they need to keep in mind the long-term effects.”
He said 97 per cent of Malaysia’s water supply comes from rivers, and if rivers are not treated with care, they might lose their main source of water.
He added that 58 per cent of local rivers are categorised as clean, 34 per cent as slightly polluted and seven per cent as completely polluted.
Stephanie Evers, environmental science assistant professor of University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus, said that with climate change, different countries react differently. Usually, the wet gets wetter while the dry, drier.
She said unusual weather patterns are not only affecting Malaysia, but taking place all over the globe.
Evers added that there is strong evidence which suggests human activities have contributed to greenhouse gases in the atmosphere and climate change.
“When there is an increased concentration of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, it acts as a barrier to heat escaping the earth,” she said, which explains the hotter days in the country.
- See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/water-rationing-takes-toll-on-health-environment#sthash.9dYf5Ixc.dpuf

Monday, April 14, 2014

Malaysia News: Water rationing extension decision in two weeks, says Selangor MB (11 April 2014)

MALAYSIA

Water rationing extension decision in two weeks, says Selangor MB

BY BOO SU-LYNAPRIL 11, 2014UPDATED: APRIL 11, 2014 03:06 PM

Residents queue to get water from a Syabas truck at Taman Tan Ming. The Selangor government will decide in a fortnight if water rationing in the Klang Valley should be extended beyond this month. — file picture Residents queue to get water from a Syabas truck at Taman Tan Ming. The Selangor government will decide in a fortnight if water rationing in the Klang Valley should be extended beyond this month. — file picture

SHAH ALAM, April 11 — The Selangor government will decide in a fortnight if water rationing in the Klang Valley should be extended beyond this month, Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim said today. - See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/water-rationing-extension-decision-in-two-weeks-says-selangor-mb#sthash.oyHW29hx.dpuf

The Selangor mentri besar was asked about the possibility of the water rationing, which started last month, being prolonged to August to prepare for the dry season.
“We’ll be making a decision in the next two weeks,” Khalid told reporters at the sidelines of the Selangor legislative assembly here today.
“The exco will be meeting next week on how we’ll resolve the water issue and water rationing,” he added.
The fourth phase of water rationing in the Klang Valley is expected to end on April 30 since the exercise started early last month.
DAP’s Klang MP Charles Santiago said yesterday that Malaysia must start harvesting rainwater and ramp up consumer education on prudent water consumption, pointing out that the water problem was here to stay. 

He also criticised Syabas — the main water supplier in the country’s most populous state as well as the neighbouring federal territories of Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya — for resorting to water rationing instead of exploring other measures to conserve water.
The federal lawmaker pointed out that stopping car washes would save up to eight times more water than rationing measures, or 3.5 million litres a day if one million cars a week are not washed.
According to water information initiative International Benchmarking Network for Water and Sanitation Utilities, Malaysia’s total water consumption in 2007, the latest year where information is available, was 351 litres per person per day, compared to Singapore’s 272 litres.
On non revenue water ― which is water “lost” before it reaches the customer, either through leaks, theft or legal usage for which no payment is made ― Malaysia recorded 34 per cent in 2007, compared to Singapore’s four per cent.
- See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/water-rationing-extension-decision-in-two-weeks-says-selangor-mb#sthash.oyHW29hx.dpuf

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Malaysia News: DAP MP: Malaysians use 500l water a day, three times more than Singapore (10 April 2014)

DAP MP: Malaysians use 500l water a day, three times more than Singapore

Citing a 2003 study, Klang MP Charles Santiago rang the alarm as he said Malaysian households use a whopping 500 litres of water a day. — file picture Citing a 2003 study, Klang MP Charles Santiago rang the alarm as he said Malaysian households use a whopping 500 litres of water a day. — file picture
KUALA LUMPUR, April 10 — Malaysia must start harvesting rainwater and ramp up consumer education measures, a DAP lawmaker said today as the country teeters on the brink of a national water crisis.

Citing a 2003 study, Klang MP Charles Santiago rang the alarm as he said Malaysian households use a whopping 500 litres of water a day compared to Singapore’s 155 litres and Thailand’s 90 litres, while the United Nations’ (UN) recommendation is 200 litres per day.
He also upbraided Syarikat Bekalan Air Selangor (Syabas) — the main water supplier in the country’s most populous state as well as the neighbouring federal territories of Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya — for resorting to water rationing instead of exploring other measures to conserve water.
“Stopping cars from being washed saves up to eight times more water compared to water rationing,” Charles told a joint press conference with PKR’s Rafizi Ramli and PAS’ Khalid Samad at the Parliament lobby here.
“Water of about 3 million litres per day is conserved, because one million cars times 25 litres for one car wash equals 25 million litres per week, which works out to 3.5 million litres per day,” he added.
According to Charles, the study was carried out by Professor Dr Chan Ngai Weng, who is now the president of consumer awareness group, Penang Water Watch.
The federal lawmaker warned Malaysians that the water problem was here to stay, even as two major dams in Selangor reportedly have just about 80 days of water supply before hitting critical level.
“After one month of water rationing, the government only managed to save a nominal seven per cent,” said Charles.
“The government’s strategy is clearly not working. Households are merely rescheduling their water consumption. The Selangor state government, including SPAN and Syabas, have taken the lazy way out by resorting to water rationing,” he added, referring to two water concessionaires.
Pandan MP Rafizi said Putrajaya should instruct Indah Water Konsortium to improve their filtration system to reduce the ammonia content in the sewerage water coming out from sewerage plants.
“The sewerage treatment plant releases ammonia content of between 20 and 30 milligrams per litre. It goes into the rivers. But the water treatment plants can only process three milligrams per litre.
“So we’re forced to rely on the rain to dilute the ammonia content. How long are we going to wait for the rain?” Rafizi told reporters.
English daily The Star reported Selangor Water Management Authority (Luas) director Md Khairi Selamat today as saying that the water treatment plants in Batu 11, Cheras, and Bukit Tampoi were reopened on March 30, after they were previously closed due to high ammonia levels in rivers.
The fourth phase of water rationing in the Klang Valley is expected to end on April 30 since the exercise started early last month.
- See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/dap-mp-malaysians-use-500l-water-a-day-three-times-more-than-singapore#sthash.RcuHURHR.dpuf

Monday, February 17, 2014

Malaysia News: CM leaves it to MPPP to respond (8 Feb 2014)

CM leaves it to MPPP to respond

Published on 5th February, 2014
CHIEF Minister Lim Guan Eng has left it to the local council to respond to the issue concerning the beach erosion and water pollution at a stretch along the popular Batu Ferringhi beachfront.
Lim said the matter concerned Indah Water Konsortium Sdn Bhd (IWK). He did not want to add anything more.
“The Penang Island Municipal Council (MPPP) will be coming up with a statement on this.
“Of course, we look at it very seriously and we will take action.
“I am sure MPPP will be looking into this matter.”
However, IWK has denied that it was responsible for the black-coloured substance flowing into the sea.
Its communications senior manager, Shahrul Nizam Sulaiman, claimed that the company’s sewage treatment plant, which serves a population of 30,000 users in Penang, was in good operational condition.
“We have found no evidence of burst piping anywhere.
“Everything is in working order. There were also no leakages found in all IWK sewer pipe networks.”
While not denying that the problem could stem from its sewage system, IWK claimed it was unable to pin-point the source of the black effluents flowing into the sea.
Shahrul Nizam also claimed that the results of the water samples collected met the parameters set by regulators.
This, he said, was to ensure they met industry standards.
“The substance could even be from farms nearby and direct discharges from other premises and individuals.
“Those who place the blame on us as the culprit behind the pollution should come forward.
“They should provide evidence, such as video footage and photos of the contaminated areas.
“We are willing to work with the state government to improve the water condition.
“We have the proper expertise to do so.”
Shahrul Nizam said based on checks by IWK officers, the black-coloured substance was not spewing out of its plant.
“During checks earlier today (yesterday), the black substance could be seen by our officers near the hawker centre, which is located in front of the plant.
“There could be other sources causing the pollution.”
When contacted for the second time, Shahrul Nizam reiterated the stand by IWK that it had taken all measures to ensure that the pollution did not originate from its treatment plants.
“We have 6,000 sewage treatment plants and 16,000km of underground sewerage piping.
“We have conducted comprehensive checks on them in the last three days.”
DIrty, smelly water gushing out of a pipe, believed to be that of Indah Water Konsortium Sdn Bhd, from the Pantai Utara treatment plant into Sungai Batu Ferringhi yesterday. Pic by Danial Saad