Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. 24/7 Space News .




WATER WORLD
Malaysia pays $133 mn after delays to troubled dam
by Staff Writers
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) Oct 02, 2013


Malaysia's government agreed to pay $133 million in compensation to two foreign contractors for losses incurred in the problem-plagued Bakun Dam, an audit has revealed.

The compensation, revealed in the Auditor-General's annual report, is a rare official acknowledgement of problems in a highly controversial project that Transparency International once labelled a "Monument to Corruption".

The report submitted to parliament Tuesday said two contractors suffered delays of up to four years in civil engineering works, causing their costs to spike.

The contractors were French-based Alstom and Impsa-Malaysia, which is largely controlled by Argentina's Impsa group.

The $2.3 billion dam, which began operations in 2011, is the largest in a series of hydroelectric facilities in the heart of the Borneo rainforest that have been completed or are planned by the government of Sarawak state.

Environmentalists, anti-graft activists, and native tribes denounce Bakun -- which has reportedly displaced more than 10,000 native tribal villagers with its Singapore-sized reservoir -- as a corruption-plagued environmental and human disaster.

Sarawak's chief minister, Taib Mahmud, has repeatedly denied mounting accusations of enriching himself, his family, and cronies through a stranglehold on the state's economy, including the dam projects.

The start-up of Bakun's turbines in 2011 came five decades after it was first proposed, following funding problems, tribal protests, and corruption accusations.

The Malaysian government has never publicly investigated the allegations swirling around the project.

Despite Bakun providing more than double Sarawak's energy needs, a series of other dams are in the works.

Taib's government says it must provide energy to lure investors to the state, one of Malaysia's poorest.

His opponents say companies linked to Taib are the main beneficiaries of the cheap energy and contracts related to dam construction.

Critics accuse Malaysia's central government of refusing to probe Taib because he controls parliament seats vital to the ruling coalition.

Taib's dams have met with increasing indigenous protests. More than 100 tribesmen are now blockading access to another dam at remote Murum to demand compensation, activists say.

.


Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








WATER WORLD
Dams provide resilience to Columbia from climate change impacts
Corvallis OR (SPX) Oct 02, 2013
Dams have been vilified for detrimental effects to water quality and fish passage, but a new study suggests that these structures provide "ecological and engineering resilience" to climate change in the Columbia River basin. The study, which was published in the Canadian journal Atmosphere-Ocean, looked at the effects of climate warming on stream flow in the headwaters and downstream reach ... read more


WATER WORLD
China unveils its first and unnamed moon rover

Mission to moon will boost research and awareness

Mighty Eagle Improves Autonomous Landing Software With Successful Flight

Watch Out for the Harvest Moon

WATER WORLD
NASA Wants Investigations for a Mars 2020 Rover

Suggestion of supervolcanoes on Mars ignites controversy

Scientists find a martian igneous rock that is surprisingly Earth-like

Martian chemical complicates hunt for life's clues

WATER WORLD
Tokyo gadget show offers glimpse of tomorrow

Astronauts Practice Launching in NASA's New Orion Spacecraft

"GRAVITY" is Almost Here

International Partnership Releases Space Exploration Benefits Paper

WATER WORLD
Chinese VP stresses peaceful use of space

China's space station to open for foreign peers

Last Days for Tiangong

China civilian technology satellites put into use

WATER WORLD
Unmanned cargo ship docks with orbiting Space Station

New space crew joins ISS on Olympic torch mission

Station Crew Readies for Cygnus' Sunday Arrival

American, two Russians take shortcut to space

WATER WORLD
UFO? Star cluster? No, it's Falcon 9's jettisoned fuel

ILS Proton Successfully Launches ASTRA 2E for SES

APSCC 2013 reaffirms Arianespace's focus on the Asia-Pacific region

Arianespace and Astrium sign deal to begin production of 18 new Ariane 5 vehicles

WATER WORLD
Astronomers create first cloud map of distant planet

How Engineers Revamped Spitzer to Probe Exoplanets

ESA selects SSTL to design Exoplanet satellite mission

Coldest Brown Dwarfs Blur Lines between Stars and Planets

WATER WORLD
New sensor could prolong the lifespan of high-temperature engines

Paradigm shift: Need something in space? Print it, don't ship it

China to be world's top gold buyer this year: experts

NGC Completes Safety of Flight Testing on Common Infrared Countermeasure System




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement