@Green January/February 2021 | Page 3

January-February , 2021 | @ green

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Don ’ t even think about it
Kedah REE mining venture raises environmental and health concerns
p28
Save our elephants
Rampant illegal logging giving rise to human-beast conflicts
p29
Menraq to the fore
Orang Asli forest patrol makes giant leaps in saving Malayan Tiger
p30
Making Malaysian agriculture truly sustainable
Agriculture needs to be made more appealing
@ green Says …

Where ’ s the walk in the talk ?

Malaysia is presumably one of the wealthiest

nations in Southeast Asia and was supposed to have been a developed nation by 2020 .
But Malaysia is on course to double its absolute CO2 emissions from 2005 to 2030 . ( Interestingly , the official goal is formulated as a 45 per cent reduction in greenhouse gas emission ( GHG ) intensity ).
But Malaysia already belongs to the top 13 per cent highest greenhouse gas emitters per capita ( 2012 ) when including the emissions from land-use change and forestry .
This brings the GHG emission of Malaysia up to 14.8 tonnes CO2e per capita , which is only slightly lower than the United States ’ emission ( 18.6 tonnes CO2e per capita ).
This is the comparison with some other countries in Southeast Asia :
• indonesia : 8.0 tonnes CO2e per capita
• Thailand : 5.6 tonnes CO2e per capita
• Vietnam : 2.8 tonnes CO2e per capita With climate change identified as an existential threat to humanity , Malaysia needs to buck up and show regional leadership . If Malaysia , as one of the wealthiest countries in Southeast Asia , does not show leadership with real climate change commitments and action , it gives poorer countries a free pass of doing nothing .
There are plenty of low-hanging fruits within the field of energy efficiency that remain un-plucked . This would be an excellent place to start for Malaysia - also economically , as the investment return for energy efficiency is attractive . Consider these :
• Malaysia still has fossil fuel energy subsidies , especially for natural gas / electricity production . According to the IMF 2013 data , the Malaysian fossil fuel subsidies , including externalities ( mostly health impacts on the Malaysian population from air pollution ) amounts to RM88 billion / year . In other words , fossil fuels costs are artificially low , which skews the playing field , making it harder for environment-friendly solutions to be competitive .
• Malaysia does not have any carbon tax or plans , if memory serves right , to implement carbon taxation . This means that it is free to pollute the atmosphere with greenhouse gasses even though climate change by the UN has been identified as an existential threat to humanity .
• The 2019 paper “ A Proposal for Carbon Priceand-Rebate ( CPR ) in Malaysia ” by Darshan Joshi from the Penang Institute , proposes a gradual carbon tax to be implemented in Malaysia . Studies show the carbon tax in Malaysia should be RM120 per tonne CO2 equivalents ( tCO2e ) to compensate for society ’ s costs .
Darshan also argues that taxation should be made such that the B40 families gain financially from the implementation of carbon taxation . The Malaysian government can earn about RM5 billion per year , which can fully cover Malaysia ’ s climate funding . p20
p21 p21 Building blocks for Malaysia 5.0
Humans must be trained to excel at something which will remain out of AI reach for at least some time to come
p22 House on fire
We are not doing any favour by giving significant subsidies to fossil fuels
p23 Environment-friendly mobility
Use of fossil fuel for electric power generation and transport are the ‘ worst offenders ’ for carbon emissions
p24 Hype v Substance
Sustainability : an early career working definition p24