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 EcoSky, KL by Eco World v2, Retail : Office : Residence

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ManutdGiggs
post Oct 17 2014, 01:11 PM

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QUOTE(BigMan123 @ Oct 17 2014, 10:08 AM)
This 7 page booklet on ecosky clarita came with star paper today. Hard sell strategy now?
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Lotsa leftover in blk C has proven a strong dev with fh land but strange strategy n soso loc ll not hav immediate success in a single project. EM should hav a beta sales vs tis. wink.gif
Calculator2013
post Oct 17 2014, 03:05 PM

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QUOTE(devil98 @ Oct 17 2014, 10:11 AM)
anyone receive stamp loan agreement from lawyer already ?
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Nope, no receive yet.
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Asgaard
post Oct 17 2014, 05:33 PM

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Almost every week got Ecoworld pamphlet in The Star news paper.
PeriPeri2014
post Oct 18 2014, 06:27 PM

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how is the sales of Block C ??
PeriPeri2014
post Oct 21 2014, 06:52 PM

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any update?? y so quite??
Kvsual
post Oct 21 2014, 06:57 PM

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QUOTE(PeriPeri2014 @ Oct 21 2014, 07:52 PM)
any update?? y so quite??
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Update?
1st two blocks fully sold out.
Now sselling Block Clarita with better furnishing like tiles n free samsung Auto Lock door handle.
PeriPeri2014
post Oct 21 2014, 07:01 PM

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QUOTE(Kvsual @ Oct 21 2014, 06:57 PM)
Update?
1st two blocks fully sold out.
Now sselling Block Clarita with better furnishing like tiles n free samsung Auto Lock door handle.
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Dunno last block how is the sales?? 50% sold out??
Donalduck22
post Oct 23 2014, 12:10 PM

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QUOTE(fongolou @ Oct 17 2014, 01:18 AM)
My parent in law told me ecoworld went to sibu to do fair there.
Heard that their shoplot is open fir sales niw..rm4.8mil
They aso show the site pics...looks great in progress...
*
Aiks.. I was told by the SA that the shoplots are only for rent? And the retail management to be controlled by ecoworld shakehead.gif

This post has been edited by Donalduck22: Oct 23 2014, 12:11 PM
BigMan123
post Oct 23 2014, 02:08 PM

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At property fair in One Utama.. they told me there is 20 - 30% balance units left
kochin
post Oct 23 2014, 02:40 PM

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give or take, should be 60% sold overall.
tower c i think about 40% sold.
tower a and b still got units qua.

tengster
post Oct 23 2014, 03:18 PM

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QUOTE(Donalduck22 @ Oct 23 2014, 12:10 PM)
Aiks.. I was told by the SA that the shoplots are only for rent? And the retail management to be controlled by ecoworld  shakehead.gif
*
Maybe you were told wrongly. Retail lots are sold to others too. Ecoworld will assist in leasing and potentially control it. Dont think they will be tire shops or car repair workshop there.
Donalduck22
post Oct 24 2014, 12:11 PM

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Tower C still got a number of floors at the top yet to be opened for sales. So unlikely more than 50% sold.

Ok. Hopefully not too many random shops opening there rclxub.gif
SDEHCE
post Oct 25 2014, 12:25 PM

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QUOTE(Donalduck22 @ Oct 24 2014, 01:11 PM)
Tower C still got a number of floors at the top yet to be opened for sales. So unlikely more than 50% sold.

Ok. Hopefully not too many random shops opening there rclxub.gif
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Will this affect the price of EcoSky?
The location of the incinerator seem very near, just opposite the lake.


MRCB shortlisted for incinerator project

By theedgemalaysia.com
Wednesday, 24 September 2014 13:35 Bookmark and Share

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian Resources Corp Bhd (MRCB) said it has been shortlisted for the 1,000-tonne-per-day waste-to-energy incinerator project in Taman Beringin, Kepong, which is estimated to cost up to RM800 million.

This confirms The Edge Financial Daily’s report on Monday, which quoted industry sources as saying that the group had been shortlisted, together with Puncak Niaga Holdings Bhd, UEM Environment Sdn Bhd and DRB-Hicom Bhd, beating 29 other competitors. It is said MRCB will team up with South Korea’s Hyundai Rotem Co to bid for the concession, which may be for up to 30 years.

MRCB chief financial officer Ann Wan Tee was quoted as saying in a Bernama news report yesterday that the group is expected to submit its bid to the government in November.

“We are putting our best effort to win the tender. We are ‘fighting’ against other bigger boys as well, let’s see whether we can win it. It is going to be a concession. We do not know how long the government would give the concession [but] to build [the incinerator], it will take three to four years,” Ann reportedly told newsmen after the group’s extraordinary general meeting.

MRCB’s tender book stands at about RM1.1 billion for its construction arm and RM1.8 billion for its property arm. On the development of the first parcel of the Kwasa Damansara project, Ann said the land is still under the condition precedent period as the group and Kwasa Land Sdn Bhd are required to get certain approvals.

“We are going to have a couple more EGMs ... because the agreement is quite sizeable,” he was quoted as saying by Bernama.


This article first appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, on September 24, 2014.


SDEHCE
post Oct 25 2014, 12:34 PM

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Tender documents for Waste to Energy (Wte) plant in Taman Beringin, Kepong highlight major concerns about the identified site for this plant


Media Statement by Dr. Ong Kian Ming, MP for Serdang, on the 4th of March, 2014

Tender documents for Waste to Energy (Wte) plant in Taman Beringin, Kepong highlight major concerns about the identified site for this plant

This morning, I visited the proposed site for a Waste to Energy (WtE) plant in Taman Beringin, Kepong, as part of a visit that was organized by Unit Kerjasama Awam Swasta (UKAS) for those interested in putting a bid for this project. The proposed site is located next to the Taman Beringin Transfer Station.

One of the documents which were released to the potential bidders was a site study conducted by Uni-Technologies, a company owned by Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM). The report entitled “Mengkaji Kesesuaian Tapak Bagi Pembinaan Loji Rawatan Termal di Kawasan Tapak Pelupusan Sisa Pepejal Taman Beringin, Jinjang Utara, Kuala Lumpur” (Site Suitability Study for the building of a thermal treatment plant at the Solid Waste Disposal Site in Taman Beringin, Jinjang Utara, Kuala Lumpur) (Attached below). This study (attached below), which was completed in February, 2013, assumed that a thermal treatment plant – in other words, an incinerator – would be built at the proposed site. This is further proof that the entire tender exercise is biased towards the building of an incinerator despite the claim from the National Solid Waste Management Agency that the tender is technology neutral.

More worrying, the same report also showed that the proposed site B for the WtE plant does not fulfil the 500m buffer zone which is a requirement under the guidelines established by the Department of Environment (DOE). For Options B1 and B2, the proposed plant is 91.78m and 56.93m respectively from the Jinjang Utara residential area (See Appendix 1A and 1B below). At the same time, Options B1 and B2 are also only 76.72m and 112.4m from an existing Shell and Petronas Petrol stations.

The lack of this buffer zone would not only put at risk the residents in nearby Jinjang Utara but could potentially be hazardous to those who frequent the two nearby petrol stations. It was only in November 2013 that a fire broke out at the Tuas incinerator plant in Singapore. [1] If the same happened in the WtE plant at the proposed site, which is next to a major highway (MRR2) and in a high population density area, the lives of many people would be put at risk.

In addition, according to the KL Draft City Plan 2020, the propose WtE site also overlaps with future planned residential areas in the vicinity (See Appendix 2 below).

The fact that the National Solid Waste Management Agency chose only to present this study to the potential bidders and not to the public at large clearly shows that they are worried about the possible negative implications from the publication of this study. This once again shows the lack of consistency and transparency on the part of the National Solid Waste Management Agency and the Ministry of Urban-Well Being, Housing and Local Government in managing the building of the proposed WtE plant.

Dr. Ong Kian Ming
Member of Parliament for Serdang

Attachment: “Mengkaji Kesesuaian Tapak Bagi Pembinaan Loji Rawatan Termal di Kawasan Tapak Pelupusan Sisa Pepejal Taman Beringin, Jinjang Utara, Kuala Lumpur” (Site Suitability Study for the building of a thermal treatment plant at the Solid Waste Disposal Site in Taman Beringin, Jinjang Utara, Kuala Lumpur)

Appendix 1A: Option B1 on Proposed Location Site

Appendix 1B: Option B2 on Proposed Location Site

Appendix 2: Overlap between Site Option B and Future Residential Planning


http://ongkianming.com/2014/03/04/press-st...for-this-plant/

SDEHCE
post Oct 25 2014, 12:36 PM

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Will incinerator project dampen prices?


Saturday, 19 July 2014

By: THEAN LEE CHENG


Government flats being constructed near the National Waste Transfer Centre in Taman Beringin in Kepong, Kuala Lumpur.
Government flats being constructed near the National Waste Transfer Centre in Taman Beringin in Kepong, Kuala Lumpur.


Will the plan by the Government to build an incinerator in Kepong at the current National Waste Transfer Centre affect property prices?

According to various real estate professionals who declined to be named, yes. The effect on property prices will not be just over the short to medium term, but over the longer term as well.

“It is a major consideration. Who wants to live near a major source of pollution?” he asks.

Their comments bring to mind the plight of a relative several years ago. She bought an apartment off-plan for about RM200,000 before the price hike which started in 2010. The project was accessible via Bukit Jalil Highway. She did not check what was in the area before she signed on the dotted line. When the development was completed, she stayed for less than a year. She moved out and within a short while, she sold it because she was unable to get it tenanted. More than half of the units were unoccupied.



The apartment was located a few kilometres from a dump site. Although she cannot see it from her living room balcony, the smell of rubbish was perpetually in the air. That dump site was a major source of air pollution.

According to a real estate professional who wants to remain annonymous, the steel plant in Klang is a major source of pollution, which explains why certain areas located near the plant showed little or no price appreciation.

According to his research between 2009 and 2013, double storey houses in Bandar Baru Klang, Taman Eng Ann, Taman Bunga Melor and Taman Meru Selatan hovered between RM220,000 and RM260,000 for years. It was only in 2013 when prices touched RM300,000.

“These townships were located about 4km from a steel plant. Double-storey housing in Taman Chi Liung, Taman Sri Andalas and surrouding townships about 10km away from the plant enjoyed higher price appreciation by comparison,” he says.

“People are wary of areas where there is a major source of pollution,” he says. The same agent says Rawang had the same negative perception. A cement factory there has been a major source of employment for decades.

The entry of various developers into Rawang has resulted in more developments in that area, chiefly due to soaring land prices in and around Kuala Lumpur the last couple of years.


A second source who declined to be named says locating the incinerator in the national capital will have several implications. “It will not only bring down property prices in the short and medium term, but it will dampen prices over the longer term beyond the 5 to 10km radius because incineration will produce very fine ash gas. These pollutants will be dispersed over a wider area beyond the 15km radius although the closer you are to the source of pollutant, the worse off you will be. That is only logical,” he says.

There will be environmental issues as poisonous by-products of this incineration process will pollute the air and enter the food chain. These environmental challenges are linked to human health concerns. Pollutants will contaminate food grown or produced in the area. It will contaminate the water.

“Pollutants do not travel on roads. There are in the air and settle on food. It impacts locations right up to Bandar Utama and Taman Tun Dr Ismail which sit on the 10km radius. When we travel by car, we get the perception that TTDI is very far away. If we were to travel in a straight line from the proposed site, Taman Tun Dr Ismail and Bandar Utama are just 10km from the proposed site of the incinerator,” says a real estate source.

The source says the incinerator will also impact banks as most properties are purchased with debt. “The banks think nothing of the incinerator project because they think it is someone else’s problem. It will impact them because people buy properties on borrowed money. When the property value goes down, the banks are impacted,” says the valuer.

Another property source says for such a major project to be located in the national capital, a detailed environmental impact assessment (EIA) must be done and the results made public.

“The people must be engaged, not just within the immediate surroudings but further afield as ash and particles are airborne,” he says.

“For the longest time, the Government has been talking about making Kuala Lumpur the top 20 most livable cities in the world.

“There must be some criteria upon which this aspiration is based.

“Will having an incinerator help the Government towards this end?

“How does Singapore manage their waste? Before we embark on such a project with so many implications, it is only prudent to study the matter further,” he says.

During a drive to the national waste transfer centre located off the Middle Ring Road 2, lorries can be seen entering and leaving the centre. The air is foul. Less than 1 km away is the Metropolitan Park and about 4km away is the Selayang Hospital.

Over at Taman Beringin in Kepong, located behind the National Waste Transfer Centre, is an on-going construction of several blocks of low cost flats.

About 1,600 units are being developed. According to the notice board on the current construction site, the owner of the project is the National Housing Department (Jabatan Perumahan Negara). It is a project by Urban Wellbeing, Housing and Local Government Ministry (formerly Housing and Local Government Ministry). Next to the construction site are several similar looking but older flats, which are already occupied.

A contractor says some of the 1,600 units will be ready this year. The air in this area is also foul.

The question is, why is the government building so many flats next to the National Waste Transfer Centre, a major source of air pollution? The occupants of these flats will be living with foul air 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

According to a resident in the area who wants to be known as Miss Liau, the National Waste Transfer Centre has been there for years.

About 2km away from the proposed incinerator site are two new projects, EcoSky by Eco World Development Group Bhd and Mah Sing Group Bhd’s Lakeville Residences.

Both of them are located adjacent to each other in Taman Wahyu, Kepong. EcoSky comprises about 940 units and has a gross development value (GDV) of about RM1bil while Lakeville comprises 1,800 units and has a GDV of RM1.15bil. Lakeville is 50% sold. Both projects are expected to be completed in 2018.

Other significant projects within the 8 to 10km radius include Naza group’s KL Metropolis, located in the Matrade area in Segambut and Kwasa Damansara project, about 10 km away, in Sungai Buloh. Kwasa Land, a unit of the Employees Provident Fund, is the master developer of the 943ha.

The current role played by the National Waste Transfer Centre is to receive waste from Petaling Jaya and the Federal Territory daily.

These waste are then transferred to the Bukit Tagar Sanitary Landfill (BTSL), located at the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur.

The primary function of BTSL is to receive and dispose municipal waste of Kuala Lumpur and Selangor. The landfill has been in operation since April 1, 2005 and receives 2,500 tonnes of municipal solid waste daily. BTSL has been designed to receive up to 5,000 tonnes per day of waste and has a 120 million metric tonnes capacity.

It is capable of receiving and treating waste from Kuala Lumpur and Selangor for over 65 years. If it continues to dispose Kuala Lumpur waste only, it will last 130 years.

The landfill is developed by KUB-Berjaya Enviro Sdn Bhd, a joint venture company between Berjaya Corporation Berhad (60%) and KUB Malaysia Berhad (40%). It occupies a 283ha (700 acres) footprint and is surrounded by a buffer zone of 404ha of palm oil plantations.

The National Waste Transfer Centre, where the incinerator is to be sited, is only 3 hectares (7 acres).

“Look at the numbers in its proper perspective. You have a landfill far from the city on 700 acres, with a considerable lifespan to accept 2,500 tonnes of rubbish.

“And you have a 3-hectare site in the city in a densely populated area to incinerate 1,000 tonnes of rubbish with an initial investment of RM1bil, with wide-ranging negative implications,” says the source.

A visitor to BTSL says the landfill is “free of smell”. “It is really sanitary,” he says.

This same visitor says if the government wants to build an incinerator, the people must first be taught to separate their garbage.

“Plastic, metal and paper can be recylced. Japan and Taiwan took decades to educate their people.

“Today, if you visit Tokyo, there are no rubbish bins around. You take your rubbish home with you. Are we ready (to separate our garbage)?”

“The next question is maintenance. We are known to build things, but not to maintain them,” he says.

·The people we spoke to for this story requested anonymity.



http://www.thestar.com.my/Business/Busines...lity/?style=biz
SDEHCE
post Oct 25 2014, 12:37 PM

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http://ongkianming.com/wp-content/uploads/...udy-For-TTP.pdf
BigMan123
post Oct 25 2014, 04:37 PM

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Bro....long report. Can summarize key points?
Fresh Tomato
post Oct 25 2014, 04:56 PM

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What's the conclusion?
BigMan123
post Oct 25 2014, 07:14 PM

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Somehow people like to associate incinerator with ecosky. Time to move on la.......Incinerator, no incinerator, life goes on
PeriPeri2014
post Oct 25 2014, 07:29 PM

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QUOTE(SDEHCE @ Oct 25 2014, 12:36 PM)
Will incinerator project dampen prices?
Saturday, 19 July 2014

By: THEAN LEE CHENG
 

Government flats being constructed near the National Waste Transfer Centre in Taman Beringin in Kepong, Kuala Lumpur.
Government flats being constructed near the National Waste Transfer Centre in Taman Beringin in Kepong, Kuala Lumpur.
Will the plan by the Government to build an incinerator in Kepong at the current National Waste Transfer Centre affect property prices?

According to various real estate professionals who declined to be named, yes. The effect on property prices will not be just over the short to medium term, but over the longer term as well.

“It is a major consideration. Who wants to live near a major source of pollution?” he asks.

Their comments bring to mind the plight of a relative several years ago. She bought an apartment off-plan for about RM200,000 before the price hike which started in 2010. The project was accessible via Bukit Jalil Highway. She did not check what was in the area before she signed on the dotted line. When the development was completed, she stayed for less than a year. She moved out and within a short while, she sold it because she was unable to get it tenanted. More than half of the units were unoccupied.
The apartment was located a few kilometres from a dump site. Although she cannot see it from her living room balcony, the smell of rubbish was perpetually in the air. That dump site was a major source of air pollution.

According to a real estate professional who wants to remain annonymous, the steel plant in Klang is a major source of pollution, which explains why certain areas located near the plant showed little or no price appreciation.

According to his research between 2009 and 2013, double storey houses in Bandar Baru Klang, Taman Eng Ann, Taman Bunga Melor and Taman Meru Selatan hovered between RM220,000 and RM260,000 for years. It was only in 2013 when prices touched RM300,000.

“These townships were located about 4km from a steel plant. Double-storey housing in Taman Chi Liung, Taman Sri Andalas and surrouding townships about 10km away from the plant enjoyed higher price appreciation by comparison,” he says.

“People are wary of areas where there is a major source of pollution,” he says. The same agent says Rawang had the same negative perception. A cement factory there has been a major source of employment for decades.

The entry of various developers into Rawang has resulted in more developments in that area, chiefly due to soaring land prices in and around Kuala Lumpur the last couple of years.
A second source who declined to be named says locating the incinerator in the national capital will have several implications. “It will not only bring down property prices in the short and medium term, but it will dampen prices over the longer term beyond the 5 to 10km radius because incineration will produce very fine ash gas. These pollutants will be dispersed over a wider area beyond the 15km radius although the closer you are to the source of pollutant, the worse off you will be. That is only logical,” he says.

There will be environmental issues as poisonous by-products of this incineration process will pollute the air and enter the food chain. These environmental challenges are linked to human health concerns. Pollutants will contaminate food grown or produced in the area. It will contaminate the water.

“Pollutants do not travel on roads. There are in the air and settle on food. It impacts locations right up to Bandar Utama and Taman Tun Dr Ismail which sit on the 10km radius. When we travel by car, we get the perception that TTDI is very far away. If we were to travel in a straight line from the proposed site, Taman Tun Dr Ismail and Bandar Utama are just 10km from the proposed site of the incinerator,” says a real estate source.

The source says the incinerator will also impact banks as most properties are purchased with debt. “The banks think nothing of the incinerator project because they think it is someone else’s problem. It will impact them because people buy properties on borrowed money. When the property value goes down, the banks are impacted,” says the valuer.

Another property source says for such a major project to be located in the national capital, a detailed environmental impact assessment (EIA) must be done and the results made public.

“The people must be engaged, not just within the immediate surroudings but further afield as ash and particles are airborne,” he says.

“For the longest time, the Government has been talking about making Kuala Lumpur the top 20 most livable cities in the world.

“There must be some criteria upon which this aspiration is based.

“Will having an incinerator help the Government towards this end?

“How does Singapore manage their waste? Before we embark on such a project with so many implications, it is only prudent to study the matter further,” he says.

During a drive to the national waste transfer centre located off the Middle Ring Road 2, lorries can be seen entering and leaving the centre. The air is foul. Less than 1 km away is the Metropolitan Park and about 4km away is the Selayang Hospital.

Over at Taman Beringin in Kepong, located behind the National Waste Transfer Centre, is an on-going construction of several blocks of low cost flats.

About 1,600 units are being developed. According to the notice board on the current construction site, the owner of the project is the National Housing Department (Jabatan Perumahan Negara). It is a project by Urban Wellbeing, Housing and Local Government Ministry (formerly Housing and Local Government Ministry). Next to the construction site are several similar looking but older flats, which are already occupied.

A contractor says some of the 1,600 units will be ready this year. The air in this area is also foul.

The question is, why is the government building so many flats next to the National Waste Transfer Centre, a major source of air pollution? The occupants of these flats will be living with foul air 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

According to a resident in the area who wants to be known as Miss Liau, the National Waste Transfer Centre has been there for years.

About 2km away from the proposed incinerator site are two new projects, EcoSky by Eco World Development Group Bhd and Mah Sing Group Bhd’s Lakeville Residences.

Both of them are located adjacent to each other in Taman Wahyu, Kepong. EcoSky comprises about 940 units and has a gross development value (GDV) of about RM1bil while Lakeville comprises 1,800 units and has a GDV of RM1.15bil. Lakeville is 50% sold. Both projects are expected to be completed in 2018.

Other significant projects within the 8 to 10km radius include Naza group’s KL Metropolis, located in the Matrade area in Segambut and Kwasa Damansara project, about 10 km away, in Sungai Buloh. Kwasa Land, a unit of the Employees Provident Fund, is the master developer of the 943ha.

The current role played by the National Waste Transfer Centre is to receive waste from Petaling Jaya and the Federal Territory daily.

These waste are then transferred to the Bukit Tagar Sanitary Landfill (BTSL), located at the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur.

The primary function of BTSL is to receive and dispose municipal waste of Kuala Lumpur and Selangor. The landfill has been in operation since April 1, 2005 and receives 2,500 tonnes of municipal solid waste daily. BTSL has been designed to receive up to 5,000 tonnes per day of waste and has a 120 million metric tonnes capacity.

It is capable of receiving and treating waste from Kuala Lumpur and Selangor for over 65 years. If it continues to dispose Kuala Lumpur waste only, it will last 130 years.

The landfill is developed by KUB-Berjaya Enviro Sdn Bhd, a joint venture company between Berjaya Corporation Berhad (60%) and KUB Malaysia Berhad (40%). It occupies a 283ha (700 acres) footprint and is surrounded by a buffer zone of 404ha of palm oil plantations.

The National Waste Transfer Centre, where the incinerator is to be sited, is only 3 hectares (7 acres).

“Look at the numbers in its proper perspective. You have a landfill far from the city on 700 acres, with a considerable lifespan to accept 2,500 tonnes of rubbish.

“And you have a 3-hectare site in the city in a densely populated area to incinerate 1,000 tonnes of rubbish with an initial investment of RM1bil, with wide-ranging negative implications,” says the source.

A visitor to BTSL says the landfill is “free of smell”. “It is really sanitary,” he says.

This same visitor says if the government wants to build an incinerator, the people must first be taught to separate their garbage.

“Plastic, metal and paper can be recylced. Japan and Taiwan took decades to educate their people.

“Today, if you visit Tokyo, there are no rubbish bins around. You take your rubbish home with you. Are we ready (to separate our garbage)?”

“The next question is maintenance. We are known to build things, but not to maintain them,” he says.

·The people we spoke to for this story requested anonymity.
http://www.thestar.com.my/Business/Busines...lity/?style=biz
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