Showing posts sorted by date for query sun cable. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query sun cable. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Friday, October 25, 2024

ASEAN Power Grid agreements do not include Australia- Singapore's declaration that Sun Cable will be "a meaningful complement to the Asean Power Grid" meaningless

 by Ganesh Sahathevan



                Singapore aspires to become Asia's renewable energy hub:Nikkei Asia

The Edge reported , quoting Singapore's Minister for Manpower and Second Minister for Trade and Industry Tan See Leng: 

Singapore’s Energy Market Authority (EMA) has granted conditional approval to Sun Cable to import 1.75 gigawatts (GW) of low-carbon electricity from Australia’s Northern Territory to Singapore, says Minister for Manpower and Second Minister for Trade and Industry Tan See Leng.


Sun Cable’s US$24 billion ($31.6 billion) Australia-Asia Power Link (AAPowerLink) project involves laying a 4,300km subsea power cable connecting a solar farm in Australia’s Northern Territory to Singapore via Indonesian waters.


Considering the scale and distance of the project, Tan expects the Sun Cable project to only come online after 2035. “When completed, the project will be a meaningful complement to the Asean Power Grid and it will serve as an additional source of low-carbon electricity for Singapore.”


Minister Tan's ambition for Sun Cable to be a "a meaningful complement to the Asean Power Grid" is admirable and it is in keeping with his Prime Minister Lawrence Wong's ambition  for Singapore to be a renewable energy hub.

However the ASEAN Power Grid agreement does not provide  Australia to be part of the Grid.   Typical of ASEAN it has taken 15 years between the signing of the ASEAN Power Grid agreement in 2009 and the   ASEAN Power Grid Advancement Programme (APG-AP), which is likely to be a series of further talks which will see little if anything being actually done. In any case, none of this involves Australia. 

Singapore's declaration that Sun Cable will  be "a meaningful complement to the Asean Power Grid" is in fact meaningless, and it is hard to see why Minister Tan See Leng has chosen to make his unillateral declaration including Australia in the ASEAN Power Grid.
END 

Wednesday, October 23, 2024

Singapore's undersea solar electric cable will have no regulatory protection, but Singapore PM Lawrence Wong's government has declared the highly risky undersea solar electric cable financially and technically viable

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 







The Sun Cable project was mooted when Lee Hsien Loong was in charge, but it is now Lawrence Wong's problem


Singapore's Channel News Asia has reported:

Singapore has granted conditional approval to Sun Cable to import 1.75 gigawatts (GW) of low-carbon electricity from Australia to Singapore.

The imported electricity is expected to harness solar power from Australia's Northern Territory and will be transmitted via new subsea cables measuring 4,300km, said the Energy Market Authority (EMA) on Tuesday (Oct 22).

The amount of renewable energy imported represents about 9 per cent of Singapore’s total electricity needs, the company added.

EMA said: "The conditional approval awarded to Sun Cable recognises that the project can be technically and commercially viable based on the proposal and information submitted thus far."

Reporting on the same The Edge Singapore said: quoting   Singapore's  Minister for Manpower and Second Minister for Trade and Industry Tan See Leng:

“When completed, the project will be a meaningful complement to the Asean Power Grid and it will serve as an additional source of low-carbon electricity for Singapore.”


The project is risky, to say the least,and as Bevan Slattery points out, there are sections of the proposed cable, which if damaged, are irrepairable given the terrain:

That the Government Of Singapore led now by Prime Minister Lawrence Wong would find this project financially and technically viable, enough to be entrusted with providing 9% of Singapore's power needs is curious, especially  in rule and law driven Singapore, for international  subsea cables operate in a regulatory vacuum (see policy paper below).

The ASEAN Power Grid agreement may possibly provide some protection, but Australia is not a party to it. In addition , introducing  solar energy from Australia into the ASEAN Grid as Minister Tan proposes may well introduce added risks not previously contemplated by the parties. In fact, it does not appear as if any of them have been consulted.

END 




TO BE READ WITH 

Needed, a Framework to Protect Undersea Cables

Picture of The aircraft carrier HMS QUEEN ELIZABETH returns to its home port after completion of Exercise Crimson Ocean

In the data-driven world we live in, submarine cables are the arteries that connect nation-states and their people in literally every human activity, including trade, commerce, entertainment, and social interactions. Any interference in that flow of data can disrupt lives and livelihoods and compromise the capacity of nation-states to trade, communicate, and defend their interests. There are few instruments in public international law available to nation-states for the protection of submarine cables vital to their national interest.

However, private international law and, in particular, commercial contracts may provide the basis for a network of contracts that may provide the legal framework required to defend the network of submarine cables. The ASEAN Power Grid Agreement and the Five Power Defence Agreement may provide the analytical framework upon which a series of mutual agreements may be constructed so as to create a synthetic hardened shell around the cables.



Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Albanese must learn from Singapore and position Australia for a share of the billions that will be spent rebuilding Gaza

 by Ganesh Sahathevan

                    More listening and learning, less talking about dumb ideas like Sun Cable will better serve  Australia's   national  interest


Singapore's first ambassador in residence to Israel presented his credentials in December last year (see story below). As reported, Singapore appears to be positioning itself for the rebuilding of Gaza, and its Muslim majority neighbours Malaysia and Indonesia, by their lack of protest , appear to be happy for Singapore to take the lead. 

In Australia on the other hand Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and his Foreign Minister Penny Wong have not done anything but make quite pointless statements in support of the PLA-HAMAS, while lecturing Israel on the proper conduct of war. Australia has not fought a war to defend its territory since World War 2, so has limited expertise in that regard..


Australia does on the other hand have world class skills in engineering and construction and the iron ore and other minerals that would be needed in the reconstruction. Australians would be better served by Albanese if he spends more time and effort positioning Australia for a share of the billions that will be spent rebuilding Gaza,and the billions more that will be spent when Gaza is turned into what many believe  could be a very profitable  centre for international trade. Albanese ought to seek lessons and advice from Singapore. 






















Saturday, December 30, 2023

Singapore appoints first  ambassador in residence to Israel at height of Gaza War -Malaysia , Indonesia and Brunei likely to have been consulted prior to  appointment , and blessed the appointment with a view to the contracts for the  rebuilding of Gaza

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 


                                       In first, Singapore ambassador to Israel presents credentials to Herzog.                                                      Ambassador Ian  Mak  presenting credentialsto President Issac Herzog.                             

In appointing its first ambassador in residence to Israel, Singapore seems to be positioning itself for the rebuilding of Gaza. As  Ho Ching put it, Gaza has the potential to be another Singapore.

Singapore does so despite being surrounded by Muslims in Indonesia. Malaysia's PM Anwar Ibrahim has been particularly defiant in supporting HAMAS and when then President Of Israel Chaim Herzog visited Singapore in 1986 Malaysia , Indonesia and Brunei protested.

 It is likely that Singapore has had discussions with Malaysia and Indonesia prior to this posting, which was announced on 31 October 2023, 24 days after the 7 October incident and the commencement of the Gaza War. It is not unlikely that like Singapore, Indonesia , Brune and Malaysia also can see opportunities in the rebuilding of Gaza.

END





 

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Asian investors holding billions in property interests in Australia face heightened judicial risk- ACT Sup Crt Chief Justice has declared that land has never been ceded by Aboriginals

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 


              Singapore GIC Realty portfolio in Australia includes Exchange Tower


The Australian's Janet Albrechtsen has reported: 

Since taking up her senior role at the ACT Supreme Court in March last year, (Lucy)  McCallum has begun addresses in her courtroom by saying: “I acknowledge the First Nations people.” Then she goes further, saying: “I acknowledge that the land has never been ceded by them.”


That a Chief Justice of an Australian court has chosen to place her duties including her  judgements in the context of a belief that Aboriginals have never  ceded rights to property should concern Asian investors with interests in property in Australia. Accumulated over decades , these would run into the very many billions. 


To Be Read With

Asian investors will be relieved by rejection of move to amend Australian Constitution led by leading tax lawyer Mark Leibler, but acceptance of Aboriginal superstition by Australia's judges remains a problem





Saturday, October 14, 2023

Asian investors will be relieved by rejection of move to amend Australian Constitution led by leading tax lawyer Mark Leibler, but acceptance of Aboriginal superstition by Australia's judges remains a problem

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 





Australians have voted overwhelmingly to reject constitutional amendments that would have endangered investment by foreign investors. The movement led by leading tax lawyer Mark Leibler has been defeated despite a very extensive media campaign, funded by Australia's biggest companies and business people.  
Judges and the courts are however not bound by the vote, and they remain a danger to investment given their acceptance of Aboriginal myth and superstition.

Saturday, October 7, 2023

An overwhelming NO vote will help restore, in part, foreign investor confidence in Australia , which has been damaged by politicians and highly imaginative judges - Leadership of the YES vote by Australia's leading tax lawyer is also of concern

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 






Australia's proposed constitutional amendments may cost Malaysian, Singaporean, others invested in Australian property.


In addition, the performance of Australian politicians , especially the Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, cannot but give the impression that Australian politicians will say and do anything to gain a few votes. 

The Sun Cable debacle, which saw Albanese lie  publicly  in the presence of Singapore Prime Minister  Lee Hsien Loong about the viability of the Sun Cable project just before it collapsed, is likely to have at least raised questions in this region about Albanese's judgement and honesty.

Then his friend  the former Premier of Victoria Dan Andrews cancellation of the Commonwealth Games in Victoria  brought world wide attention to Victoria and thus Australia's financial stability. Withdrawing from hosting an international event is usually associated with third world countries. 

However and  of even greater concern is the fact that Australian judges, including the former Chief Justice of Australia, Robert French, seemed to have accepted Aboriginal myths as grounds for cancelling billion dollar resources projects. Superstition and mythology is very much part of the fabric of East and South East Asia , but never given judicial notice, and certainly not on the scale now seen in Australia. 

The fact that the leaders of the Voice referendum include Australia's leading tax lawyer, Mark Leibler, is also of concern. The Voice provides Australian businesses aligned with its proponents a vehicle to structure business propositions in an exclusionary, monopolistic way, as seen in South Africa and Malaysia which have Voice like constitutional provisions.  These are not jurisdictions that are safe for foreign investors.  



Friday, April 14, 2023

Australia's proposed constitutional amendments may cost Malaysian, Singaporean, others invested in Australian property half of freehold value in extinguished native title compensation - Leading Australian tax firm outlines the problems (but says landowners should be mature enough to pay the price)

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 

Australia's proposed consitutional amendments may cost  Malaysian, Singaporean, others invested in Australian property half of freehold value in extinguished native title  compensation - Leading Australian tax firm outlines the problems (but says landowners should be mature enough to pay the price)


Australians are being asked to consider amendments, described as The Voice,  to their Commonwealth constitution similar to Article 153 of the Federal Constitution, Malaysia, from which the special Bumiputera rights derive.  

The beneficiaries in the Australian case are its Aboriginals , who can already claim native title over  much of Australia. That title can be the basis of compensation and other monetary claims, under exisiting laws (even if the claims are  not yet widespread). 


The leading Melbourne tax law firm, Arnold Bloch Leibler explained in an op-ed published in 2019 how a decision of the High Court recognised that Aborigines were entitled to compensation for their extinguished native title, calculated in that case to be half of freehold value.  The firm is also a leading  proponent of the proposed consitutional amendments, and has said in effect that paying compensation s the right, mature thing to do (see article below).


All this however can mean that  Malaysians, Singaporeans and  others invested in Australian property may soon be liable to pay  half of freehold value in extinguished native title  compensation. The Voice constitutional  amendments if passed into law are likely to mean more claims for compensation, and quite likely, a more streamlined, formal process for the payment of compensation. 


To Be Read With  




Friday, April 14, 2023

Arnold Bloch Leibler said in 2019 that landmark High Court decision awarding substantial compensation for extinguished native title " shouldn't inspire land title fearmongering"- Senior partner Mark Leibler is today one of the most vocal supporters of The Voice referendum , scolds Australians for being afraid, but has been silent about the consequences for all Australians who can be subject to native title compensation claims that could equal or exceed half of freehold value

 by Ganesh Sahathevan

                                                                      

                                            Mark Leibler, "In Support Of A Voice"


In 2019 Bridgid Cowling , a senior associate in the native title practice at Arnold Bloch Leibler wrote an op-ed published in The SMH where she explained how the High Court had provided a framework for assessing extinguished native title compensation claims, and had determined that compensation ought to be half of the freehold value.


She ended by declaring: 

Twenty-seven years after the Mabo decision and 23 after the Wik decision, surely now is the time for us to bury that old chestnut in the compost heap of useless scaremongering.

Let us be the civil society that the High Court of Australia believes us to be – an Australia that accepts the compensation as appropriate, fair and just, and celebrates the decision as a clear, positive way forward for the nation.

 Today, in 2023, the senior partner and. founder of that firm, Mark Leibler, has taken to public fora to lecture Australians on the error they will make if they vote to reject The Voice referendum. Instead of scolding  Australians for being afraid, he ought to explain the  consequences for all Australians who can be subject to native title compensation claims. 


To Be Read Wth 


OPINION

Timber Creek decision shouldn't inspire land title fearmongering

By Bridgid Cowling

March 21, 2019 — 11.11pm

One of my first tasks as an intern with the Northern Land Council was to source an interpreter for the Timber Creek native title case of the Ngaliwurru and Nungali Peoples.


As English is not their first language, they needed an interpreter to communicate their connection to country to the judge, and help the claimants and the legal system to understand one another.


Michael Murrimal of Timber Creek at the Gregory National Park in the Victoria River Region in the Northern Territory.

Michael Murrimal of Timber Creek at the Gregory National Park in the Victoria River Region in the Northern Territory. GLENN CAMPBELL

Fourteen years on (20 since the native title claim was first lodged), the High Court of Australia has not only understood and recognised the native title rights of the Ngaliwurru and Nungali peoples, it has found an elegant way to understand the impact of the extinguishment of those rights, and to put a dollar figure on it.


It has valued native title rights and translated the loss of connection caused by extinguishment into financial compensation.


The decision

The High Court decision in Timber Creek is a relatively uncontroversial decision that clinically interprets the compensation provisions of the Native Title Act and plainly applies the common law.



The High Court has given us a clear process for assessing compensation: What are the native title rights and interests? What acts have extinguished native title? What is just compensation as required by the Native Title Act?


The compensation will comprise the economic value of native title rights and interests that have been extinguished, plus an amount for additional, non-economic or cultural loss caused by the diminution of the native title holders’ connection to country.


In the Timber Creek case, the economic value of the non-exclusive native title rights and interests was 50 per cent of the freehold value of the land. This amounted to $320,250, with an additional amount of $910,100 interest on that sum. The award for cultural loss was $1.3 million.


What now?

Each compensation decision will be unique, dependent on the acts of extinguishment, the native title rights and interests that are extinguished, and the specific impact on the native title holders themselves. State legislation will be relevant to the analysis of the extinguishment and compensation. As the High Court emphasised, there is no one-size-fits-all approach.


There is also no magical economic analysis that can be undertaken by extrapolating the financial compensation award in Timber Creek to accurately estimate a total bill for compensation payable under the Native Title Act. Such a suggestion – and there have been many of them in the wake of the decision – should be viewed with extreme caution.



So too should statements that native title holders around the country will be inspired by the Timber Creek decision to make a flood of compensation claims. Those with long enough memories will remember that we’ve experienced this kind of unwarranted hysteria before. When native title was first, and belatedly, recognised by the High Court in 1992, "back yards are under threat" fearmongering abounded. Thankfully we’ve moved on as a country since those dark days.


Native title holders and their advisers have been working with the Native Title Act and its compensation regime for years now. If there has been a delay in making compensation claims before the courts, it is because claim groups are busy responding to future act notices, negotiating agreements and proving their native title.


It is also because, responsibly, many will have held off until there was clear guidance from the courts. As the High Court recognised in its judgement, the resources of native title claimants are limited.


The Timber Creek decision does not usher in any new law. It is a conservative judgment and extremely helpful.


As the first High Court decision of its kind, it provides much-needed guidance on a valuation process and on how the courts will approach compensation claims. Native title holders, proponents, governments and lawyers advising them will be much better able to negotiate in good faith, and accurately assess what is fair compensation.



The decision is not remotely surprising. Nor is it in any way radical. Responsible governments and proponents have been preparing for this day for decades.


Any suggestion that they have been caught unawares speaks either to poor planning or, more likely, to a disingenuous attempt to employ the “bucket loads of extinguishment” politics of fear that we saw after the 1996 Wik Decision, in which the High Court found that native title could co-exist with pastoral leases. An unworthy response that set back the cause of reconciliation by a decade or more.


Over the past 20 years, every significant reasonable gain in Aboriginal land and sea rights has been met with a corresponding outcry that the recognition of rights will be detrimental to business and/or is, for some other reason, unjust.


Twenty-seven years after the Mabo decision and 23 after the Wik decision, surely now is the time for us to bury that old chestnut in the compost heap of useless scaremongering.


Let us be the civil society that the High Court of Australia believes us to be – an Australia that accepts the compensation as appropriate, fair and just, and celebrates the decision as a clear, positive way forward for the nation.



Bridgid Cowling is a senior associate in the native title practice at Arnold Bloch Leibler


https://www.smh.com.au/national/timber-creek-decision-shouldn-t-inspire-land-title-fearmongering-20190321-p5166m.html

Thursday, October 19, 2023

Australia's PM Anthony Albanese who lied on the international stage to PM Lee Hsien Loong of Singapore about the viability of his plan to sell solar power to Singapore is now demanding laws to prevent "misinformation"

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 


Australia's PM Anthony Albanese who lied on the international stage to PM Lee Hsien Loong of Singapore about the viability of his plan to sell solar power to Singapore is now demanding laws to prevent "misinformation"

Having lost his referendum Australia's PM Anthony Albanese is now demanding laws to prevent "misinformation"
https://lnkd.in/gacDz6SJ

This is the same man who lied, on the international stage, to PM Lee Hsien Loong of Singapore about the viability of his plan to sell solar power to Singapore
https://lnkd.in/gaNpPQqD



TO BE READ WITH 


Tuesday, January 10, 2023

Albanese's Sun Cable fantasy collapses - Albo must now explain why he misled Australians, and Singapore PM Lee Hsien Loong

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 




    

Albanese has used his position to promote Sun Cable, in Australia and overseas, despite Sun Cable having no power supply agreement with the Government Of Singapore.


A dispute between Mike Canon- Brookes  and Twiggy Forrest is said to have been the reason why Sun Cable has been put into administration.  The ABC is reporting that there are " disagreements about the funding and direction of the company......these included the significant amounts of cash that Sun Cable was spending, and its failure to achieve certain milestones".


As reported by this writer Sun Cable, Prime Minister Albanese of Australia, and the Chief Minister of The Northern Territory, Natahsa Fyles, all claimed that Sun Cable would supply Singapore with solar power from a solar bank in the Northern Territory, when in fact no agreement had been reached with the Government Of Singapore.


All three, but in particular Albanese and Fyles, must now explain why they misled Australians, and account for all any government resources provided the project.


TO BE READ WITH




 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-01-11/sun-cable-enters-administration/101845100




Monday, October 24, 2022

PM Lee Hsien Loong confronted with another Crooked Bridge dilemma. From the south, out of Australia, Australia's PM Albanese demands that Hsien Loong share his fantasy of a solar power cable connecting Singapore and Australia

 by Ganesh Sahathevan


The crooked bridge project was mooted by Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad before he retired as premier in 2003. PHOTO: GERBANG PERDANA


For much of the past decade Singapore has had to endure demands from Malaysia's Mahathir Mohamad that the causeway connecting the two countries be replaced by what has become known as the Crooked Bridge. His resignation as prime minister of Malaysia in 2020 seems to have put that demand to rest but now it seems Singapore and its prime minster Lee Hsien Loong are being tormented by a similar demand, this time from the south,  from Australia's PM Albanese  who  demands that  Hsien Loong share his fantasy of a solar  power cable connecting Singapore and Australia. 

As this writer noted, Albanese seemed to be channeling BJ Habibie, the former Indonesian President (who is supposed to have described Singapore as a little red dot) when he told Hsien Loong at a press conference in Canberra: 

"This island continent of ours is a little bit bigger than the island continent of Singapore...... And hence, a project like Sun Cable, which has the potential to export clean energy to Singapore, is the ultimate win-win. If this project can be made to work - and I believe it can be - you will see the world's largest solar farm, you will see the export of energy across distances, the production of many jobs here in Australia, including manufacturing jobs".

Hsien Loong said nothing in response, and that is to be expected for  Hsien Loong, his government, and the relevant authorities have yet to provide Sun Cable any approvals whatsoever to Sun Cable:

Infrastructure Australia says Sun Cable's Darwin-Singapore solar cable qualifies for taxpayer funding, Singapore says Sun Cable does not have permission to import electricity into Singapore


While Mahathir's insistence on the Crooked Bridge despite a lack of interest from Singapore caused local Malaysian media to investigate the motivation for the project, there has yet to be any serious investigation in Australia into Albanese's fantasy.

END