Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Energy News .




TECH SPACE
Malaysia hearing on Australia rare earths plant postponed
by Staff Writers
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) Oct 4, 2012


A Malaysian court Thursday postponed until next week a hearing on a temporary operating licence granted to Australian miner Lynas Corp for a rare earths plant, an activist said.

The decision to postpone the hearing to next Wednesday further delays the start of operations at the $800-million facility, which has been dogged by protests from environmentalists and residents over concerns about radiation.

Lynas secured the operating licence in early September but Kuantan High Court in eastern Pahang state, where the plant is based, put it on hold later that month after an appeal by activists.

Environmental group Save Malaysia Stop Lynas, which is spearheading the case against the miner, said its lawyers Thursday called for the hearing at the Kuantan court to be delayed so they could answer affidavits filed by Lynas.

"The court has postponed the hearing to October 10. The interim stay on the temporary operating licence continues until that date," group spokesman Tan Bun Teet told AFP.

The court was expected to rule on the application by three individuals to permanently stay the operating licence at next week's hearing, he said.

Activists and local residents have vowed to shut the plant -- the biggest outside China -- which has emerged as a controversial issue in the country's national elections, which must be held by the middle of next year.

China currently supplies about 95 percent of the world's rare earths, used in high-tech equipment from iPods to missiles, but Lynas hopes the Malaysian plant will help it break the Chinese dominance of the market.

The plant will process material from Lynas' Mount Weld mine in Western Australia.

Lynas has insisted the plant is safe, and any radioactive waste it produces will only be low-level and not harmful to human health.

But opposition politicians and environmentalists have expressed fears that radioactive waste it produces can seep into the ground and water, harming the environment and people's health.

.


Related Links
Space Technology News - Applications and Research






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








TECH SPACE
Breakthrough in kitchen furniture production
Helsinki, Finland (SPX) Oct 02, 2012
Biocomposites challenge chipboard as furniture material. Researchers at VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland have developed a kitchen furniture framework material from plastic polymers reinforced with natural fibre. The new material reduces raw materials consumption by 25 per cent and the carbon footprint of production by 35 per cent. "The frames are lighter by nearly a third because t ... read more


TECH SPACE
French supermarket takes to water to cut carbon footprint

Lightning sparks mass power cut in Azerbaijan: official

LADWP Approves Environmental Study of New Transmission Project to Access Renewable Energy

US Electricity Generation Wastes Huge Amounts Of Water

TECH SPACE
Chinese ships enter disputed waters: Japan

Volcano power plan gets U.S. go-ahead

Glum Chinese data sinks oil prices

Time bomb: Military ordnance in Gulf poses threat to shipping

TECH SPACE
EU wind power capacity reaches 100GW

Lawsuit fights Obama ban on wind farm sale to Chinese

US bars China wind farm deal on security grounds

Wind power faces tax credit uncertainty

TECH SPACE
New efficiency record for photovoltaic cells - thanks to heterojunction

Trina Solar Roadshow puts Installers on Fast Track

SolarAid and SunFunder Launch New Crowdfunding Project to Finance Solar Lighting in Zambia

KYOCERA Solar Modules Tested to Show Only Minimal Power Output Degradation After 20 Years in the Field

TECH SPACE
S. Korea shuts down two nuclear reactors

Europe's nuclear plants need 25-bln-euro upgrade

Japan resumes reactor work despite non-nuclear aims

EU vows 'no complacency' on nuclear plant defects

TECH SPACE
Napiergrass: A Potential Biofuel Crop for the Sunny Southeast

Most biofuels are not green

New Uses for Old Tools Could Boost Biodiesel Output

World's first biofuel jet flight to take off in Canada

TECH SPACE
China Spacesat gets 18-million-USD gov't support

Tiangong Orbit Change Signals Likely Date for Shenzhou 10

China Focus: Timeline for China's space research revealed

China eyes next lunar landing as US scales back

TECH SPACE
Humans added plenty greenhouse gases before industrialisation

Salt marsh carbon may play role in slowing climate warming

Extreme climate change linked to early animal evolution

Loss of species makes nature more sensitive to climate change




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement