Showing posts with label news for lynas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news for lynas. Show all posts

Saturday, 3 March 2012

Lynas Malaysia's Interview with Elena Willis



What is Lynas doing in Malaysia? Dato' Haji Mash'al Ahmad, Managing Director of Lynas Malaysia Sdn Bhd, explains that Lynas chose to locate its' plant in Malaysia due to its' economic viability, even though it has met regulations and approvals in Australia. The smooth-running of the plant requires huge amounts of water which costs but which costs 6 ringgit per metric cube Australia, but 84 cents per metric cube in Malaysia. Electricity costs 96 cents per kilo per hour in Australia, but 23 cents per kilo per hour in Malaysia. Caustic soda costs RM 1500 million per metric tonne in Australia, but RM 500 million per metric tonne in Malaysia. Furthermore, the scarcity of technologically skilled people in Australia means that engineers need to be paid RM 14,000 per month in Australia, but RM 10,000 per month in Malaysia.

RADIOACTIVE waste dump in Malaysia a super subsidy for LYNAS — SM Mohamed Idris


March 02, 2012
MARCH 2 — In recent days, we have heard the authorities giving contradictory signals regarding the disposal of radioactive waste from Lynas Corp’s Gebeng refinery.
According to the health minister, Lynas would be told to move the radioactive wastes outside of Kuantan or ship these back to Australia. This was the agreement reached by him and the ministers of International Trade and Industry, Science, Technology and Innovation, and Natural Resources and Environment.
Four days on, February 26, the prime minister said that the radioactive wastes would be dumped far away from residential areas.
Another two days later, February 28, the public was told that the four ministries had decided to store the radioactive waste in Malaysia and a possible site had been found.
The following day, the Green Technology, Energy and Water minister said that the Cabinet had not given up on sending back the radioactive waste to Australia.
In fact, the impression given was that Malaysia was mulling over the option of whether to actually send the radioactive waste from Lynas back to Australia.
This being the case, we are wondering why the Malaysian government had not thought of getting Mitsubishi, the company that produced radioactive waste in the Asian Rare Earth (ARE) factory in Bukit Merah, Perak over 30 years ago, to send its wastes back to Japan.
It is still not too late as the radioactive waste may continue to contaminate our environment and pose a threat to Malaysians for countless generations, thanks to the apathy of the government (and Atomic Energy Licensing Board). If the government thinks that it can ship radioactive waste back to Australia, we are sure that the same could have been done for the ARE waste.
If the government had done this earlier, we would not be burdened with having to deal with these radioactive wastes with a half-life of 13.9 billion years. In other words, we are now left with having to manage radioactive waste that will remain radioactive forever.
This was a stupendous subsidy for Mitsubishi (and Japan). The radioactive waste left behind is a source of contamination to our soils, forests, water systems and the air. (Thorium, when it decays, produces radioactive radon gas that can be carried for long distances, generously covering the air Malaysians breathe).
These are enormous liabilities to Malaysia, our ecosystems and our health and safety. The damage to our land, forests, waters and air and the costs to the health of Malaysians is incalculable. These future costs were never factored in when Mitsubishi was allowed to operate. In the absence of knowledge about future risks and costs, the government (AELB) decided it was a golden investment opportunity. Mitsubishi took the profits home and left this toxic legacy that will last for billions of years — or forever.
Despite the fact that work has begun on an underground storage system (at the cost of over RM300 million), there is no guarantee that this underground storage of some 80,000 200L drums of radioactive wastes from the ARE factory will remain geologically stable for the next 100 years, let alone 1000 years.
Bear in mind that Malaysia is made up mainly of limestone, which is highly porous, unstable and prone to erosion, making it very unsuitable for the storage of long-lived radioactive wastes. Climate change, tsunamis, earthquakes, the recent unprecedented floods and natural disasters should serve as a clear warning. Should any disaster occur, Malaysian taxpayers will have to foot the bill.
The ARE factory in Bukit Merah was underwritten with enormous public subsidies where all the risks and costs were socialised and borne by Malaysia and its present and future generations.
Allowing Lynas to dump its radioactive wastes on Malaysian soil will be the sweetest ultimate subsidy of all. This is on top of the tax-free billions that it will reap as profits. Note that Lynas’s rare earths production will be ten times more than that produced at the ARE factory, thus the wastes level will be immense. If the damages and costs are not addressed by the authorities, they will be burdening future generations of Malaysians with radioactive wastes they had no part in creating.
As it is, the annual US$10 million (RM30 million) that Lynas will pay Malaysia for five years beggars belief. It is farcical that the economic, social, environmental and health costs to the workers, communities, the land, forests, soils, waters, seas, and future generations are seen as amounting to just US$50 million.
Allowing Lynas to dump its radioactive wastes in Malaysia forever is indefensible.
* SM Mohamed Idris is president of the Consumers Association of Penang and Sahabat Alam Malaysia
* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication. The Malaysian Insider does not endorse the view unless specified.

Friday, 2 March 2012

WHAT IS LYNAS??

Many people asking what is Lynas about? for the first i hear it, i also don't know what it mean.
So I went on Google and found that, “Oh, it’s about rare earth”.
Huh? What?
“Rare earth. You don’t know what’s rare earth?”
No?
“Dumbass”. And we continued drinking.
Later, we got home, watched a few episodes of Homeland (truly awesome series, btw) and now G has collapsed in bed.
For some reason, I’m still not ready to sleep. Probably has something to do with the couple of candy bars and a packet of pork scratchings I inhaled while watching TV. So I ended up googling “Lynas”.
The more I read what I read, the sicker I felt in my guts.
Why?
1. Lynas is basically an Australian company that’s building a $230 million rare earth processing plant in a location called Gebeng that’s about 30km from the town of Kuantan, Pahang. The project has been approved by our government.
2. So what is “rare earth”? From the little that I’ve read….oh, nothing much. Just a beautiful, politically correct name for natural occurring minerals that are RADIOACTIVE.
3. In a nutshell, what this Kuantan-based Lynas plant will do is remove radioactive elements from the rare earth minerals so that what’s left can be used in various industries, namely electronics.
4. When a part of something is removed, there will be waste. In the case of Lynas, radioactive elements will be removed from rare earth minerals resulting in a humongous amount of RADIOACTIVE waste; in the form of gas, liquid and solids.
5. Lynas is not sending the radioactive waste back to Australia, because the government of Australia forbids it. So yeap, it will be disposed in Malaysia.
6. Errrr…how will it be disposed?
7. Some said the radioactive waste will be dumped into the South China Sea. Some said it will be dumped on open ground just like what happened in Bukit Merah. Yeah, I know right, I also didn’t know that we actually had experienced radioactive disaster in our very own Malaysia too!
8. Then I immediately googled “How far does radiation spread?”. Basically, 50km radius is YOU ARE SCREWED ZONE.
9. And crap, it doesn’t stop spreading. The radioactive levels just get lesser as it gets further but THEY DON’T STOP.
10. Which means, although we are 260kms away from Lynas in the comfort of Klang Valley, we are all also at risk.
11. I have relatives in Mentakab and they are a pretty far 140kms away but for them to just be in the same negeri/state concerns me.
12. Our food sources, seafood sources, water sources….they are all at risk.
13. Let me put it this way, if the Japanese can fail to defend their own nuclear power plant, how much faith should I put into our government and in the Ozzies for ensuring a radioactive disaster-free life?
14. 5 years? 15? 25? 30 years is about the maximum and bloody hell, I should still be alive then, possibly with grandchildren.
15. Or not, cause exposure to radiation affects fertility.
I believe we should tell everyone we know what Lynas is. Read up about it. Speak out. Don’t ignore your gut feelings.
# – By the way, the Himpunan Hijau 2.0, a peaceful protest against Lynas plant is happening today at these locations:
And that’s what an average dumbass such as I, thinks about it.