Minister Yeo Bee Yin said the EQMP did not alert authorities to the illegal dumping of toxic waste at Sungai Kim Kim last March as well as in other environmental incidents. — Picture by Shafwan Zaidon

GEORGE TOWN, July 24 — The Energy, Science, Technology, Environment and Climate Change Ministry (MESTECC) will review the RM846 million Environmental Quality Monitoring Programme (EQMP) after it failed in its role as an early-warning system in the Johor pollution crises earlier this year.

Minister Yeo Bee Yin said the EQMP did not alert authorities to the illegal dumping of toxic waste at Sungai Kim Kim last March as well as in other environmental incidents.

“MESTECC has since been reviewing the performance and efficiency of the system; the legal aspects, and renegotiating the terms of agreement, with the possibility of early termination,” she said in an official response to Malay Mail regarding the EQMP.

Yeo also said the matter was reported to the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) last month.

“MESTECC has offered its full support to the anti-corruption agency’s investigation,” she said.

The EQMP is a public-private partnership project between the federal government and a private company that was signed in 2017.

Pakar Scieno TW Sdn Bhd was awarded the concession to operate the programme between July 2017 and January 2032 at the cost of RM846 million.

Yeo said this translated to about RM60 million a year, RM5 million a month, or RM167,000 a day including both fixed and variable charges.

“The hefty cost charged by the concessionaire makes up almost 30 per cent of DoE’s annual budget, depriving the department from critical expenditures on transportation, tools and most of all human development for enforcement activities,” she said, referring to the Department of Environment.

The EQMP’s aim was to provide a real-time data collection for air, river and marine quality levels as well as a command centre for analysis.

It was supposed to act as an early-warning system to prompt immediate and proactive response to environmental incidents such as haze, oil spills, industrial disasters and illegal dumping of toxic wastes.

However, the system did not provide such early warnings for recent incidents at Sungai Kim Kim, Kuala Koh and Sungai Kelang.

According to a DoE source, the water quality index (WQI) system under the EQMP was flawed as the monitoring stations were not strategically placed.

“The stations were placed near industrial areas along rivers in Johor so most of the rivers were found to be most polluted but in Selangor, Perak and Penang, the stations were located upstream from industrial zones, so the readings would show less pollution,” he claimed.

He said there should be a more comprehensive way of taking WQI readings for rivers, especially ones that flow through industrial zones where factories tend to channel waste directly into the waterways.

“It is time the government do something about this EQMP that is not effective and yet they are getting paid so much each month,” he said.

According to news reports in 2016, then natural resources and environment minister Datuk Seri Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar announced the concession agreement for the EQMP between the ministry and Pakar Scieno TW Sdn Bhd.

He reportedly said there will be 82 stations set up to monitor air quality nationwide, 1,387 stations to check water quality in rivers and 405 stations to monitor marine water.

Wan Junaidi said the EQMP will provide real-time information on the quality of air and water in the sea and rivers to act as an early-warning system that allows quick and proactive action.