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Thursday, April 12, 2018

MAP calls for attention to mangrove loss in Pitas, Sabah in Malaysia

Written by Hal Wallis
In December 2014, at the opening of Malaysia’s largest shrimp aquaculture project located in Sabah state on the northern part of the island of Borneo, Sabah’s Chief Minister Sabah Datuk Seri Musa Aman said:  "I am confident this project will help raise the living standards of the locals as it will generate more than 3,000 jobs besides the spin-over effects." 
Over three years later and with 2300 acres of mangroves already cleared for aquaculture, the local indigenous communities have yet to benefit from even a fraction of the promised jobs, while suffering a range of adverse impacts to their health, environment, security and culture. 
A further 1,000 acres of mangroves, upon which local communities depend for their food and security, are threatened with further shrimp pond developments.  Bihahon Subonging, a leader from Kampung Boluuh and a member of the G6 collective which represents the interests of six indigenous communities in Pitas, including around 2500 people says: “We are poorer now, than before. Before the mangroves gave us food so we could sustain ourselves and now our pantry (the mangroves) are bare of food.”
The Environmental Justice Atlas (EJA) reports a wide range of visible, negative environmental impacts, as well as health and socio-economic impacts, including the destruction of sacred areas and burial sites. The Pitas region is home to more than six indigenous communities who now rely on the remaining mangrove area for their livelihood. These communities have lived in the area for more than nine generations, supporting themselves in large part through foraging in the mangrove areas.   
 The visible impacts of the large project include biodiversity loss, food insecurity (crop damage), pollution through waste overflow with visible surface water pollution and decreased water quality.  EJA reports a potential risk of large-scale disturbance of hydro and geological systems resulting from the project. 
Work by MAP shows the area of high quality mangrove losses based on overhead images from 2013 and 2018, available through Satellite imagery.
The Pitas development is a government initiative through state subsidiary company Inno Fisheries Sdn in collaboration with Sunlight Seafood (Sabah) Sdn Bhd, is reported to entail a RM1.23 bn (c US $320m) investment and the creation of about 1,500 shrimp ponds. Around 20% of the total funding is from state sources.
Yayasan Sabah’s Inno-Fisheries is a government agency whose website states its mission as being “to uplift the quality of life of Malaysians in Sabah”. Sunlight Seafood is one of the leading processors and exporters of frozen seafood products in Malaysia.
Local people, however, do not see the benefits. Noridah Samad, a local youth and a member of the G6 collective says: “Seeing our land being destroyed in the name of profit making, impedes us from sustaining our traditional livelihoods and culture. With the destruction of the 2300 ac, many youths will never learn the ways of our grandfathers and traditional knowledge will be lost.”
The project was initially planned to include a hatchery, a research and development laboratory and a training centre for the commercial development of the Pacific white shrimp (Penaeus vannamei). However, local people do not know where the hatchery is (or if there is one) and there is no sign of the promised training centre or processing plant. 
Another local farmer and fisherman, also a member of the G6 collective, says that the shrimp farm developments over 2300 acres have significantly depleted resources and affected the livelihood of subsistence farmers and fishermen in the area. Speaking at a press conference organised by Sabah Environmental Protection Association (SEPA) in 2015, he said: “We now have remaining about 1,000 acres of mangrove land which has a sensitive biosystem and hold our livelihood as well as traditional practises like traditional medicine, building materials and sacred sites. 
“We are concerned that any further expansion of the farm into this land will permanently and completely destroy our source of income and livelihood on the very ground that we have lived on for eight generations now.”
Local sources report that the clearing of mangrove areas started in April 2013, over a year before an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) review meeting was even held. Though Sabah’s Environmental Protection Department (EPD) issued a first stop work order in September 2013 after a ground report was submitted to the EPD by SEPA, and a second in December 2013, clearing work continued. In January 2014 EPD approved only infrastructure (water and electricity) works, but work on ponds and clearing continued, as can be clearly seen on satellite images, accessed by MAP.
Media in Sabah reported that Sunlight Inno Seafood Sdn Bhd, was issued with stop-work orders and fines last year after it clear-felled the area without receiving official approvals.  
SEPA president Lanash Thanda commented on the abuse of process in this partly-state sponsored development: “Environmental laws have been put into place as safeguards for the benefit and protection of all our futures and the breakdown of this law and rule process should be as serious as any other crime and not as something that can be ignored”.
According to her, the law is clear – there should be no development activities until the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) is approved.
“This situation raises alarming questions with regards to other development projects. Does this mean that projects that are government linked do not have to follow the law?
She added: “Mangroves are crucial to our fisheries industry, to wildlife and the local community who rely on the sources of income derived from the natural resources available. You cannot rebuild a destroyed ecosystem such as this. And this project is 39 times the size of the Kota Kinabalu Wetlands, so it is a sizeable area that has been destroyed to do an aquaculture project.”

Media Links and further sources
1) Feature article: 'Poverty alleviation' shrimp farms destroy mangrove forest, grab indigenous land’. The Ecologist (Camilla Capasso). 17th November 2016 [click to view]
2) News article: ‘RM360 mil Pitas shrimp project bad idea’. Free Malaysia Today. December 31, 2013.[click to view]
3) News article: ‘Thousands of Sabah poor rail against expansion of mega shrimp project’. Malay Mail on-line. 27 April 2016. [click to view]
4) News article: 'Pitas Shrimp Park needs EIA'. 12 Jan, 2015 The Star Online. [click to view]
5) News article: ‘Pitas Shrimp Park, a $277 Million Project’. Shrimp News. December 21, 2014. [click to view]
6) News article: ‘Sedia to develop 1,000 acres in Pitas for shrimp farming’. Daily Express (East Malaysia), January 24, 2014 [click to view]
7) News article: ‘Pitas aquaculture park an eco-hazard, say villagers’. The Star, 2 March 2014. [click to view]
8) News Article: ‘Destruction of mangroves continues in Pitas’. The Borneo Post.  January 12, 2015. [click to view]
9) News Article: ‘Sabah CM hails Pitas prawn project’. The Sun Daily. 20 December 2014. [click to view]
10) News Article: Mongabay Series: Global Forest Reporting Network: ‘Communities struggle to save Sabah’s shrinking mangroves’. 13 September, 2017. [click to view]
11) Call to Action for solidarity with the Pitas communities shared by Land Rights Now, 2017. [click to view
12) MAP Action Alert: ‘Save the Mangrove Forest in Pitas (Sabah), Eastern Malaysia’. January 2017 [Click here]
13) Video: ‘Voices from Pitas’. A short documentary produced jointly by Caroline Pang with Sabah Environmental Protection Association. [click to view]
14) Video on the situation in Pitas. The last of the mangroves - Bakau Terakhir [click to view]

15)  Picture: Villagers complain (image by Julia Chan)  [click to view]

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