Kuala Lumpur: Malaysia has stopped selling sea sand to Singapore, cutting off the tiny island nation's main source of one of the key materials it needs for extensive expansion plans.
Those plans include the development of the Tuas mega port, expected to be the world's biggest container terminal. Malaysia last year exported sand worth roughly $480 million to Singapore, accounting for around 97 per cent of its sand supplies.
Mahathir Mohamad has blocked the sale of Malaysian sand to Singapore, which is using the sand for its expansion.Credit:AP
Singapore, a city state of 5.6 million people, has increased its land area by a quarter since it gained independence from Britain in 1965, growing from 580 square kilometres to just under 725 square kilometres, and has largely been able to do so by using sand to reclaim coastal areas.
It plans to expand its territory further to nearly 777 square kilometres by 2030 but could be forced to curb its ambitions if sand supplies fail to materialise. According to Reuters, Malaysia's prime minister, Mohamad Mahathir, who rose to power last year, had imposed a ban on all sea sand exports in October. The decision was only made public in July as the government had reportedly been concerned about triggering a diplomatic row.
Officials claimed Mahathir was unhappy that Malaysia's land was being used to increase the size of its wealthier neighbour, and concerned that corrupt officials may receive kickbacks.
The prime minister's spokesman confirmed the halt on sand exports but he denied it was linked to reclamation works, insisting it was motivated by environmental considerations and the need to prevent illegal sand smuggling.
Singapore and Malaysia were part of British-ruled Malaya and became separate countries in 1965, but disputes over territory and shared resources have damaged relations.
Malaysia's move to block supplies means Singapore will have to depend on other countries including Burma, Bangladesh and the Philippines, which may not have the supply capacity.
In May, a UN report warned that the level of sand extraction worldwide was substantially larger than the rate at which it could be replenished. "We are spending our sand 'budget' faster than we can produce it responsibly," Joyce Msuya, the acting executive director of the UN environment unit wrote.
"By improving the governance of global sand resources, we can better manage this critical resource sustainably and truly demonstrate that infrastructure and nature can go hand in hand.
"With sand extraction regulated differently around the world, important regions for biodiversity and ecosystems are made more vulnerable by challenges in the local implementation of these regulations. A growing trend of unsustainable and illegal extraction in marine, coastal and freshwater ecosystems makes this a sustainability challenge with a display of the various extraction impacts on terrestrial, riverine and marine environments."
The row comes after Cambodia stopped sand exports to Singapore in 2017, while Indonesia imposed a similar ban the same year, citing environmental concerns. However, this did little to slow the rate of sand extraction from Indonesia, and as a result around 80 low-lying Indonesian islands risk being shrunk to nothing.
The Telegraph, London
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