NATIONAL GREEN TECHNOLOGY POLICY

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NATIONAL GREEN TECHNOLOGY POLICY Cleantech Made in Germany Industry Symposium Malaysian Green Technology Corporation 9 April 2013, The Inter Continental Kuala Lumpur

INTRODUCTION GT Baseline Low Carbon Cities initiative (LCCF) Other Green Technology Initiatives Next Steps

INTRODUCTION OF GREENTECH MALAYSIA Inception: 12 MAY 1998 FOCUS CENTRE for EE, RE, Technological R&D and Demonstration Changed name: 7 APRIL 2010 MANDATE FOCAL POINT for green technology development in Malaysia GREEN EFFECT

GREEN TECHNOLOGY FEATURES IN GREENTECH MALAYSIA The PV Modules harvest rain water for the GEO The Semi-transparent PV module doubles as skylight roof for the Atrium Rainwater harvesting use for the cooling tower, landscaping and general cleaning

Performance of Green Buildings in Malaysia Energy Indices ( kwh/m 2 year) 300 250 200 150 Typical Consumption 200 300 kwh/m2year EE in Building Guideline (1989), for MS1525 136 100 50 0 Energy Consumption Normal Buildings LEO Building EC Building The GEO Building Solar PV power Benchmark year: 2001 2006 ( 2015) MS 1525:2007 Code of Practise Use of EE & RE for Non-residential buildings

National GREEN TECHNOLOGY policy (2009) POLICY STATEMENT Green Technology shall be a driver to accelerate the national economy and promote sustainable development. COP 15 (15 DEC 2009) Honourable Prime Minister pledged during the COP15 to reduce our national carbon intensity up to 40% by year 2020 compared with its 2005 levels with the assistance on transfer of technology and adequate financing from the developed nations. www.greentechmalaysia.my

Four Pillars of GT ENERGY Seek to attain energy independence & promote efficient utilization ENVIRONMENT Conserve and minimize the impact on the environment ECONOMY Enhance the national economic development through the use of technology SOCIAL Improve the quality of life for all

GT Adoption (%) Green Technology 20-Year Outlook Perspective 50 _ Green Infrastructure 40 _ 30 _ 20 _ 10 _ Green Awareness Strengthening Institutional Framework Advocacy programs P&S availability and recognition Increase FDIs & DDIs in GT manufacturing & services sectors Formulate GT Act Expand Research, Development & Innovation on GT RE, EE, H2 Fuel Cells and Biofuel Roadmaps GT in Water & Waste Management Green Culture Green Economy 0 _ 2010 2015 RMK11 2020 2025 RMK13 2030 and Beyond RMK10 Conducive Environment for GT Development Intensify GT Research Innovation GT procurement Local & Regional market share MNCs collaboration Local SMEs & SMIs in global market Hydrogen Refueling Stations Biofuel Refueling Stations Electric Vehicles Charging Stations Waste Management Infrastructures (3R) Intensify Human Capital Development Reduction in energy consumption Sustaining national economic growth Green Lifestyle A Major GT producer Improvement of Environment Rating International collaborations RMK12 GT significant contribution towards a High Income Economy Sizeable FDIs and DDIs Improved air and water quality Green Townships Refueling Stations /Distribution network completed

National green technology & climate change council There are five (5) committees under the auspices of the National Green Technology & Climate Change Council, which is Industry Committee; Human Capital Committee,; The Committee for Research and Innovation; Promotion and Public Awareness Committee and The Committee on Transportation. Chaired by Prime Minister of Malaysia. www.greentechmalaysia.my

Introduction GT BASELINE Low Carbon Cities initiative (LCCF) Other Green Technology Initiatives Next Steps

SCOPE OF WORK Task 1 Current State Assessment Task 2 Gap Assessment Task 3 - Strategic Direction Setting 1(a) Existing initiatives on green technology development 1(b) Institutional set-up, regulatory framework, legislation, financial mechanisms etc 1(c) Assess Green Technology business environment 1(d) Research and Development (R&D) situation 2(a) Identifying internal and external shortfalls and barriers 2(b) Global Green technology development efforts 3(a) Framework for green technology roadmap 3(b) Green Technology action plan Energy Building Sectors in Scope Water & Waste Management Manufacturing Transportation Green ICT

RM Mil BASELINE ASSESSMENT: KEY FINDINGS UNDER ECONOMY 600,000 552,115 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000-10,808 GDP Contribution of Green Businesses (RM Mil) National GDP (RM Mil) 3,500.0 3,000.0 2,500.0 2,000.0 1,500.0 1,000.0 500.0 - Energy Building WWM Transport'n MFG ICT Contribution to national GDP (RM Million) 408.8 1,818.5 1,983.6 1,774.7 2,553.9 2,890.3 Contribution to national GNI (RM Million) 400.6 1,782.2 1,943.9 1,739.2 2,502.9 2,832.5

To focus predominantly on adoption and some production To enhance adoption of water conservation and waste recycling and moving forward to production To design, build and deliver buildings that are totally localized To focus predominantly on adoption and some production To focus predominantly on adoption and production particularly in basic industries To focus predominantly on adoption and innovation National Vision Leveraging on Green Technology to Achieve Sustainable Development and contribute to high income economy Energy Water & Waste Management Building Transportation Manufacturing ICT

Introduction GT Baseline LOW CARBON CITIES INITIATIVES (LCCF) Other Green Technology Initiatives Next Steps

Population Malaysia MALAYSIA & URBANISATION A Case for Change 18 million (1990) to 27.6 million (2010) - increase by 53% (Source: Census Data, 2010) Urbanization Rate 27% in 1960, 42% in 1990, 54% in 1994 and 61.8% (2000) for Malaysia Expected to grow to 75% by 2020 (Source: RFN 2001) Energy Energy Consumption 61,279 metric tons (40% transportation & 40% industrial) (2005) Energy Produced 99,917 metric tons (2005) 2006 : CO2 emission 187 million tons 7.2 metric tons/person

TOWNSHIPS AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT Sources of Green House Gas CO2 is the most important anthropogenic of GHG and the main sources of atmospheric CO2 is from burning of fossil fuels 75% of increase in atmospheric CO2 since industrial times (Source: Cities and Climate Change Global Report on Human Settlements 2011, UN-Habitat).

Low Carbon Cities Framework and Assessment System This document is to assist local authorities, township developers, designers and individuals in assessing whether developments carried out within the city contributes towards the reduction or decrease in GHG

PURPOSE OF LCCF AND ASSESSMENT SYSTEM Objective of Low Carbon Cities Framework (LCCF) & Assessment system Users To encourage & promote the concept of low carbon cities and townships in Malaysia. To increase the compatibility of cities/townships with their local natural system. To guide cities in making choice/decisions towards greener solutions. All Cities & Townships in Malaysia It is my dream that one day we can live in a clean, healthy and high quality environment, where cities, townships and communities are built on the fundamentals of Green Technology YAB Dato Sri Mohd Najib Tun Razak Targets To reduce carbon emission intensity by 40% per GDP per capita by the year of 2020

Introduction GT BASELINE Low Carbon Cities initiatives (LCCF) OTHER GREEN TECHNOLOGY INITIATIVES Next Steps

CONTENTS GTFS Application - Online A. Project Participants B. Project Description C. Project Financing D. Project Monitoring and Verification E. Submission of Supporting Documents and Attachment F. Checklist Application method: Online E-Application Website: www.gtfs.my Form GTFS2010 Supporting document to GreenTech in hard copy

ELECTRIC VEHICLES Completed In 2009, there were 8.5 million cars on Malaysian roads. For 2010 the Malaysia Automotive Association (MAA) cited 21.25 million total number of vehicles in Malaysia. For the past five years the growth in number of cars alone was between 6.8 7.3% per annum. Proton handed over three Saga Electric Vehicles (EV) and five Exora Range Extender Electric Vehicles (REEV) to the government for the first phase of fleet test

INTERNATIONAL GREEN TECHNOLOGY & ECO PRODUCTS EXHIBITION AND CONFERENCE (IGEM) IGEM 2012 was held between 10-13 September 2013 at KL Convention Center (KLCC) The event hosted an exhibition, conference, workshop and business matchmaking session The aim of IGEM is to provide a platform for the development and application of GT products in the country. Over 600 booths were taken up during the exhibition and it saw some 65,000 guests. The 4th IGEM is scheduled to be held on 10-13 October 2013.

Introduction GT BASELINE Low Carbon Cities initiatives (LCCF) Other Green Technology Initiatives NEXT STEP

NATIONAL GREEN GROWTH STRATEGIES Key Focus Enablers Human Capital as core enablers Infrastructure to support the implementation Financial incentives to increase adoption and encourage the industry development Holistic Regulatory Framework: Carbon Taxes/ Cap and Trade Marketing & Branding Support

THANK YOU MALAYSIAN GREEN TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION (462237-T) No. 2, Jalan 9/10, Persiaran Usahawan, Seksyen 9, 43650 Bandar Baru Bangi, Selangor. Tel: 603 8921 0800 Fax: 603 8921 0801 www.greentechmalaysia.my Website: