Significant investment in Sabah’s fertiliser manufacturing capacity
raises the prospect of a symbiotic relationship with the pivotal palm
oil segment, which could benefit the industry sector as a whole.
Recent months have seen a flurry of interest, as major chemical and
bio-organic operations set up shop in the state’s palm oil industrial
clusters (POICs), areas dedicated to processing palm oil.
All Cosmos Industries, a bio-organic fertiliser manufacturer, has
said that it expects the $16.12m plant it is building in the POIC in
Lahad Datu with Sabah Softwoods Hybrid Fertiliser to be complete by
October. The factory is expected to produce 150,000-180,000 tonnes
annually of bio-organic fertiliser, a product of combining chemical
materials with organic matter and used to shorten planting-to-harvesting
periods as well as sustaining crop yields long-term.
In May, a $24.19m plant built by Chemical Company of Malaysia (CCM)
opened in the same POIC, with an expected output of 130,000 tonnes per
year. CCM’s plant will produce compound fertilisers, a potassium nitrate
complex that promotes efficient nutrient uptake by crops.
"With more than 1.4m ha of palm oil cultivation in Sabah, this plant
is strategically located to ensure that growers are assured of secured
supply and timely delivery of fertilisers,” said Hamad Kama Piah Che
Othman, the chairman of the CCM Group, at the opening ceremony.
However, the standout investment in the sector is a planned $1.45bn
plant by national oil company Petronas, which is expected to transform
the town of Sipitang when it is completed in 2015. The Petronas
Chemicals Group (PCG) plant will be built by a consortium led by Japan’s
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, comprising Apex Energy and PT Rekayasa
Industri.
With estimated annual production output of 1.2m tonnes of fertiliser,
the Sabah Ammonia-Urea (Samur) complex is also expected to become a
catalyst for economic development, with spin-off effects for many
industries, including agricultural chemicals, plastics and
pharmaceuticals. The complex’s ammonia plant will be capable of
producing 2100 tonnes per day of liquid ammonia, while the urea plant
will produce 3500 tonnes per day of granulated urea.
The Petronas Chemicals Group (PCG) plant will be build in Sipitang, Sabah |
“It is part of PCG’s strategy to grow its fertiliser business, as
Asia-Pacific remains a key market. We are in an advantageous position,
as we have close proximity to the growth markets in the region. We see
sustained demand in the agricultural needs for a growing population with
changing food consumption patterns and the competing land utilisation
for higher crop yields,” said Wan Zulkiflee Wan Ariffin, the chairman of
PCG.
Covering some 1.4m ha, which produce 5.8m tonnes of crude palm oil
per year, Sabah’s palm oil industry is the largest in Malaysia and the
third largest in the world, according to the Malaysian Palm Oil Board.
Plans for increased availability of fertiliser in the coming years will
serve to further boost the industry.
While exports are a vital part of the industry – reaching a value of
$226.78m in the first three months of 2012 – there are also hopes palm
oil will create downstream manufacturing opportunities, with the
potential to create products such as oleochemicals, phytonutrients,
plywood and bio-fertiliser, as well as the possibility of generating
electricity through biomass and biodiesel.
In a May report, Agensi Inovasi Malaysia, a government think tank,
projected that utilising just 20m tonnes of biomass for downstream
value-adding will contribute $9.67bn to the gross national income.
While palm oil prices have more than tripled over the past decade –
holding at above $967 per tonne for much of 2012 due to robust demand
throughout Asia – fertiliser costs have been a constant limiter on the
industry’s growth in Sabah...
The well conceived, meticulously planned and professionally organized Sabah Economic Development and Investment Authority (SEDIA) the one stop authority to drive Sabah Development Corridor (SDC) have put Sabah as a preferred investment destination among global investors. SDC has managed to secure a planned investment of RM112 billion as at the end of June 2012. SDC have not only attracted investments worth billions of USD but also created huge employment opportunities in the state. Its logical fall out is skill development for various class of people on a massive scale.
ReplyDelete