All articles of environment in Sabah

Special boats to scoop up rubbish soon

Kota Kinabalu: A 16-feet catamaran will soon be a familiar sight along the coastline scooping up plastic waste as the first step in a long-term effort to rid tourism spots off the State Capital of flotsam. Called a Debris Skimmer, the privately-funded RM35,000 boat would rely on a 15-horse power engine and manned by at least two people who would fish out the waste on either side of the boat and put them into an accompanying net. The boat would be equipped with an implement that would skim under the water to make the job easier. "The boat is small to enable it to operate in shallow waters and the small engine is so that we do not burn so much petrol for this. Its construction is simple with just a canvas for protection," said Fred Weirowski of Blue Life Ecoservices Sdn Bhd, a joint partner in the project called NOW (No More Plastic Waste in Our Waters). The garbage would then be transferred to a mother boat, also a Catamaran about 60 feet in length and able to carry 24 net bags filled with plastic waste. "If it is near enough to the shore we will bring it to land directly or we will bring it to the mother boat which acts as a collection facility pending disposal," said Fred. Blue Life ecoservices Bhd is helping Gaya Recycle Sdn Bhd with the boat's design. "This is a public project, so we need everybody to help. We have divers going around collecting plastic, but we also want to involve the local community living in water villages here. "We want to build and train them to be coastal clean rangers and really make their places clean. Thus, we devised a system where we can see, share and solve the problem," he said. He said what made this first such sustainable environment programme different from the rest is its emphasis on recycling the plastic waste into other uses. "Everybody can have millions of beach cleaning activities, but we want to reuse and produce new things out of this. There are many opportunities," he said. Speaking at the soft launch of Project NOW at Pulau Gaya, Monday night, State Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister Datuk Masidi Manjun said pollution was among Sabah's biggest problems and there was no use pretending otherwise. "Despite having the tallest mountain and some of the bluest seas in the country, Sabah is faced with a big challenge which is pollution. I am not going to pretend that we do not have a problem, we have a big problem," he said, adding that keeping the coastline free from rubbish needs co-operation from everyone. "We have a lot of rubbish floating in our coastline, particularly plastic, and there is need to educate the people to be a bit more disciplined and not throw rubbish into the sea," he said. Project NOW was designed and developed by Gaya Recycle Sdn Bhd, a Sabah-registered company that promotes environmental awareness of recycling plastic wastes. The Public-Private Partnership initiative to clean up Sabah's tourism hotspots is a collaborative effort involving Gaya Recycle, the Ministry, City Hall, University Malaysia Sabah, Blue Life ecoservices Bhd, Environmental Action Centre, Environment Protection Department, Humana Child Aid Society and Daily Express. Masidi said most of the rubbish seen floating is due to some communities using the rivers and water ways as floating rubbish bins. "They dump it into the river and the river brings it into the sea and the waves wash them back to the shore, just like the song by Elvis Presley 'Return To Sender', the sea is returning to us what we have dumped into it," he said. "Soon we will be launching this citizens movement to which I am thankful to it's Director Marinah Harris, who has returned to Sabah and initiated it. We hope that perhaps during our own lifetime, there will be some changes in a positive way via this joint collaboration." Turning to Marinah, he said: "We have a big job ahead and your presence here is a testament to the fact that we are living in an age where there are insurmountable challenges. But with your presence and assistance, obviously it has made our jobs better." "We are leaving a good legacy for our future generation to protect, to make improvement to what we have started," he said. Marinah has been involved in several environmental programmes involving the UN in countries like Nepal, Indonesia and Cambodia. She is a daughter of ex-Chief Minister Tan Sri Mohd Harris Salleh. Eric, a friend of Marinah who flew in from Switzerland to support the effort, said: "We only have one earth and we should look after what we have. I have the pleasure of visiting your country for the first time and it is stunningly beautiful. "When we went diving today, we saw plenty of fish and also quite a lot of plastic packages on the sea bed which we picked up. It is a really fantastic initiative that is being taken here by Marinah and the State Government. If you do make an effort to clean this up, it will benefit everyone," he said. Source : Daily Express
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Masidi: Do what is right for environment

Kota Kinabalu: Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister Datuk Masidi Manjun urged all quarters to do what is right rather than just make popular moves on conservation. He said though many "vilified right decisions", personal habits had been the caused of many environmental challenges faced in Sabah at present. For example, he said the State waterways and rivers are now being treated like a dumpsite and people in the City are blaming villagers on Gaya Island and vice versa. "But according to the City Hall, 70 per cent of the rubbish are dumped from moving vehicles. We are the real culprits. "This is habit... if we do not change our habits, this problem will continue," he said in his address during the opening of Sustainable, Environment and Eco System Development (Seed), here, Monday. Meanwhile, Masidi said the State Government's move to ensure 55 per cent of Sabah having protected forests, by amending certain policies and cancelling all logging licenses had been one of the "unpopular moves". But it has resulted in Sabah raking in RM6 billion in tourism receipts, he said. "It is an unpopular decisionÉbut if we keep on logging, there is nothing left for the future. "Besides, there is nothing attractive about Sabah if the forests are gone. You can actually make money by not cutting down this resources," said Masidi, who commended the Chief Minister on the move. Masidi noted that a balance can be struck between profits and environmental responsibilities, adding that it is still not too late. He said there are some six million hectares that has not been cleared for development, hence the work of conserving it for the future remains. "We have to take action right now. The legacy I want to leave for Sabah is how to make Sabah better. This mean we take less now so that the future generation can take more," he stressed. He also suggested that the government start protecting its wildlife and marine life, saying that Sabah is now forced to send its rhinoceros to the Cincinnati Zoo in the United States for reproduction, while many of its marine resources are now ending up in markets in foreign places like Hong Kong. Masidi said Sabah is facing a tough time against poachers and illegal fishing, adding that the government needs to amend laws to conserve them. "You may not realise it, but some of the best fish from our sea is not in the local market but somewhere in Hong Kong. Our fish resources are getting lesser and the better fish are being exported," he said. Source: Daily Express
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Sabah should adopt ‘Bizarre Borneo’ Tagline, says Vice Chancellor

Kota Kinabalu: Sabah should adopt the 'Bizarre Borneo' tagline, which emphasises the uniqueness of Borneo and Sabah to promote sustainable eco-tourism. University College Sabah Foundation Vice Chancellor Prof Ghazally Ismail said eco-tourists who come to Sabah are more interested in the information behind the rich ecosystem that is sustaining the flora and fauna on the island than the opportunity to see them live. "I once brought a group of tourists to watch turtles. But when we arrived, it was raining and because turtles do not like wet sands, they did not show up. "I apologised to the tourists but to my surprise they said they did not mind. They were just happy to know that the turtles are here, that we are doing our best to conserve and protect the species," said Ghazally. Therefore, he added, it is crucial to supply as much information as possible on the uniqueness and bizarre properties of all the wildlife in Sabah since those information would become the biggest tourist assets besides the existing assets such as the orang-utans and the crocodiles. "Improving knowledge is key. Nature-based tourism must help people to understand the link between natural and cultural heritage and promote understanding and appreciation of the environment by the provision of quality information and interpretation," he said. The ecosystem on the island is very diverse, added Ghazally, with many of the flora and fauna can only be found on the island (endemic). "There are 15,000 species of plants here and 6,000 are endemic. If you want to know what is so impressive about that, the whole of New Zealand has only 2,500 species of higher plants. "We have 3,000 species of plants, 265 species of dipterocarps (hardwood) and out of these, 155 species are endemic. We have 2,000 species of orchids, 16 species of Rafflesia, all endemic to Sabah," he said. The island of Borneo also has 288 species of terrestrial mammals, 102 species of bats, 61 species of rats and mice, 91 species of marine mammals, 600 species of birds with 30 endemic species, 639 species of ants, 394 species of freshwater fish, 150 species of frogs and 195 species of lizards. Ghazally continued that the diversity of the island can be showcased by the fact that one could find 700 species of trees in a ten-hectare plot of land. "This equals the total number of tree species in Canada and United States, combined," he said. Studies on the island's biodiversity have intensified over the past decades that scientists have been able to discover three new species every month for the past ten years. The most recent study includes the rediscovery of micro-frog, long believed to have extinct, in Kubah National Park, Sarawak almost four years ago. "An example of 'Bizarre Borneo' tourism is the spectacular two-hour bat show in Sarawak. Platforms are built for tourists to sit down and watch almost two million blind bats flying in long spiralling streams to spend the night hunting for insects," said Ghazally. The acclaimed writer also hailed the construction of canopies built over the rainforests in Sabah, attributing the increased discoveries of new species to the move. According to Ghazally, the canopies have helped scientists and environmental researchers studied the natures of flora and fauna and solved countless unanswered questions such as how some insects mate or survive. "You would think that frogs are only found near water. But when studies were first conducted after the canopies were built, we found many species of frogs living on trees and they are nowhere near any water," he said. Other unique species that can be found on Borneo are little mushrooms that turn ants into zombies, sucking fish Gastromyzon borneensis with all 36 members of the genus endemic to Borneo, Bornean flat-headed frog that has no lungs and love dart slugs. "Those are the bizarre things about Borneo which I think we can turn into tourist attractions. Never mind if tourists come here and did not see a thing. They will be satisfied to know that, deep in the forests, these species are protected by us, harboured these bizarre things for the next generations. "They will go home satisfied. They will tell their friends, 'Go to Borneo. Research had been done there, areas have been protected. Go there, support their tourism so that it's sustainable'," he said. Source: Daily Express
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SEED Conference 2014

  SEED Conference 2014 YB Datuk Seri Panglima Masidi Manjun presenting an award to the winners of a competition held during the SEED Conference 2014 (Sustainable, Environment & Eco System Development) at the Grand Ballroom, Magellan Sutera Harbour Resort on the 17th of March 2014. YB Datuk Seri Panglima Masidi Manjun menyampaikan anugerah kepada pemenang-pemenang dalam pertandingan yang dianjurkan sempena dengan Persidangan SEED 2014 ( Sustainable,Environmental&EcoSystem Development) bertempat di Grand Ballroom, Magellan Sutera Harbour Resort pada 17 Mac 2014. 
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