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Home The News News Cracker may be built overseas

Cracker may be built overseas

Relocating the development project for Kuokuang Petrochemical Technology Co’s proposed eighth naphtha cracker overseas could be an option amid opposition to constructing the plant in Taiwan, Minister of Economic Affairs Shih Yen-shiang (施顏祥) said yesterday.

On a visit to Academia Sinica, Shih said that from an economic point of view, major development projects such as naphtha crackers should be built in Taiwan, but added that the government would not oppose relocating such projects overseas if the environmental cost was “too heavy to bear.”

“The government will not proceed with Kuokuang’s naphtha cracking project without the passage of an environmental impact assessment,” Shih said.

Shih made the remarks in response to questions by Chou Chang-hung (周昌弘), an Academia Sinica specialist in plant ecology and phytochemical ecology.

Chou said the proposed eighth naphtha cracker, as well as the operational sixth naphtha cracker in Mailiao Township (麥寮), Yunlin County, run counter to the government’s policies on energy-saving and reducing carbon dioxide emissions.

Chou said the sixth cracker had damaged land, air and water resources in areas near the plant.

Building a new cracker in Changhua County would cause further damage, with the proposed plant expected to account for 25 percent of the nation’s carbon dioxide emissions when operational, Chou said.

In related news, representatives of environmental protection and wildlife conservation groups accompanied 20 schoolchildren to the Presidential Office yesterday to deliver postcards to President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) asking him to protect Taiwan’s indigenous pink dolphins, which are facing extinction.

The proposed location of Kuokuang’s cracker is a 200-hectare stretch of wetland at the estuary of the Jhuoshuei River (濁水溪), which also forms part of the habitat of the pink dolphins, whose population is believed to number fewer than 100.


Source: Taipei Times - 2011/01/25



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Newsflash


From left, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, US President Joe Biden, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi wave to the media at Kishida’s office in Tokyo yesterday, before their Quadrilateral Security Dialogue meeting.
Photo: AFP

Leaders of Australia, India, Japan and the US yesterday warned against attempts to “change the status quo by force,” as concerns grow about whether China could invade Taiwan.

The issue of Taiwan loomed over a leadership meeting in Tokyo of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) nations — the US, Japan, Australia and India — who stressed their determination to ensure a free and open Indo-Pacific region in the face of an increasingly assertive China, although Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said the group was not targeting any one country.