IT HAS been a hectic 10 days in Sabah, starting with a whirlwind
visit of Prime Minister Najib Razak who was followed by his deputy
Muhyiddin Yassin and former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamed.
Throughout
this short period, a consensus is reached: Rich Sabah is poised to be
Malaysia’s richest. And the credit goes to Chief Minister Musa Aman.
Najib has made it clear that he will continue to work with Musa to
develop Sabah. Muhyddin says that investors are attracted to Sabah
because of Musa’s business friendly policies.
And during a public
lecture at the Universiti Malaysia Sabah on May 1, Mahathir told his
audience that Sabah will soon become Malaysia’s richest as it develops
its oil and gas industries.
Sabahans showed their wealth at the week-long Malaysia’s unit trust fair which was held in Kota Kinabalu for the first time from April 20 to 28. It was launched 13 years
ago by Permodalan Nasional Berhad, the country’s investment company.
Sabahans in fact need little education on investment. About 1.08m of
them, roughly a third of the state’s population, have invested 12
billion ringgit ($4 billion) in PNB’s trust funds. This makes them the
fifth largest group of investors in the country.
Najib was moved to tell PNB to invest in Sabah’s tourism, agro and
marine-industries which his government has earmarked under his massive
1.4-trillion ringgit economic transformation programme to turn Malaysia into a developed country by 2020.
And by the time Muhyiddin came to close the fair, a record of almost
270,000 people have visited it – all eager to find out what they can do
with their money sitting in the bank.
Foreign investors are flocking to Sabah as they have confidence in
Musa’s administration, according to Muhyddin. In fact Sabah had the
third largest foreign direct investments last year at 13.7 billion ringgit.
Recently, Sabah scored a coup with a 2-billion ringgit joint-venture
with America’s Darden Restaurants to build the world’s biggest lobster
farm off Semporna on the southeastern Sabah coast. Insight Sabah can
confirm that the project was headed for Singapore
if not for Musa Aman.
Bill Herzig, Darden's senior vice-president, says
his company is attracted by the Sabah government policy that encourages
economic growth. Sabah’s marine environment is also well suited to
lobster farming.
Mahathir notes that Sabah is well poised for a booming oil and gas
industry with spin-offs from the Sabah Oil and Gas Terminal in Kimanis
and the 4.7-billion ringgit Sabah ammonia and urea project (samur) in
Sipitang which is turning into an oil and gas industrial park.
The first 45-billion ringgit worth of projects is taking off. They include a 500-km (313-mile) undersea pipeline from Kimanis to Bintulu that costs 5.5 billion ringgit, a 1-billion ringgit 300-megawatt gas-fired power plant and a 1-billion regasification terminal in Lahad Datu on the east coast. (Insight Sabah)
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