Water talks with Singapore started last month, says minister


NEGOTIATIONS on the review of the price of raw water supplied by Malaysia to Singapore started last month, said Foreign Minister Saifuddin Abdullah.

He said the talks were being handled by Attorney-General Tommy Thomas and his Singaporean counterpart, and that several meetings will take place.

“Discussions on the water agreement between Malaysia and Singapore have already started. We have eight matters up for negotiations with Singapore and the water agreement is one of them.

“This is important because we could not sit at a table on the issue before this,” he told reporters after visiting the Rohingya Education Centre in Klang today.

Asked on Singapore’s response regarding the  talks, Saifuddin said it was still too early to draw any conclusions but the fact that the negotiations have started was a step forward.

On Sunday, Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad was reported as saying that Saifuddin would head the Malaysian delegation on the water talks.

Without revealing details of when the negotiations will be held, Dr Mahathir said a team of Malaysian officials were “on it” and it included representatives from Johor, the state supplying raw water to Singapore.

The water agreement cropped up in the middle of last year when Dr Mahathir criticised the price of raw water to Singapore, saying it “did not make sense” and he planned to negotiate a review of the terms.

The agreement, which expires in 2061, gives Singapore the right to source 250 million gallons a day of raw water from the Johor River.

Singapore pays 3 sen per 1,000 gallons of raw water and sells back treated water to Johor at 50 sen per 1,000 gallons. Johor obtains treated water of up to 2% of the water supplied to the city-state. – Bernama, February 19, 2019.


Sign up or sign in here to comment.


Comments