National Physical Plan
National Physical Plan
National Physical Plan
FOREWARD
Prime Minister of Malaysia
FOREWARD
Minister of Housing and Local
Government, Malaysia
FOREWARD
Director General
Department of Town and Country
Planning, Peninsular Malaysia
The National Physical Plan (NPP) is a long time coming, and its
approval by the National Physical Planning Council has been
an important milestone for the Department. Yet this approval
only marked the beginning of more challenging roles for the
Department and all the agencies involved in physical
planning, to whom this document belongs.
Peninsular Malaysia of 13.2 million hectares is not a big area.
Unless it is being planned efficiently and systematically, it is not
big enough to fulfil all the visions and dreams of its population,
or to stand strong in the eyes of the world amidst
globalisation. While physical planning on the local and state
levels have been done before, this is the first time Peninsular
Malaysia is being physically planned as one single integrated
unit. Inevitably its implementation requires a lot of
cooperation and win-win compromise between the states
and the various agencies involved.
From the NPP perspective, firstly global competitiveness must
be achieved, secondly balance in terms of opportunities must
be secured, thirdly sustainable development target must be
met, and lastly quality of life is the ultimate aim. Land use
planning must provide the enabling physical structures to
achieve all these, with the precept every hectares count.
While NPP may be able to provide this big picture, it will not
amount to great things without effective implementation,
monitoring, enforcement and review. Therefore, this
Department appreciates contributions from all the agencies
and individuals who have helped in the preparation of the
NPP, and is looking forward to more contributions and
cooperation to help realise the aspirations of NPP. It is indeed
a journey towards the establishment of an efficient, equitable
and sustainable national spatial framework to guide the
overall development of the country towards achieving quality
living environment and developed nation status by 2020.
Table of Content
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
PREAMBLE
CHAPTER 1
National Development Planning Framework
1-1
1.1
Function
1-3
1.2
Legal Framework
1-3
1.3
Form
1-4
1.4
Consultative Process
1-4
1.5
Plan Area
1-4
1.6
Plan Period
1-4
CHAPTER 2
Goal, Objectives and Principles
2-1
2.1
Goal
2-1
2.2
Objectives
2-1
2.3
Principles
2-4
CHAPTER 3
Plan Context
3-1
3.1
Global Setting
3-2
3.1.1
World Trade
3-2
3.1.2
International Organisations
3-2
3.2
National Setting
3-4
3.2.1
3-4
3.2.2
Economic Performance
3-8
3.2.3
3-14
CHAPTER 4
Development Strategy
4-1
4.1
4-1
4.2
Urbanisation
4-3
4.3
Regional Balance
4-6
4.4
Rural Development
4-6
4.5
4-8
4.5.1
4-8
4.5.2
Agriculture Land
4-8
4.5.3
4-10
4.5.4
Urban Land
4-11
4.5.5
Tourism
4-15
4.5.6
ICT Development
4-17
4.5.7
Infrastructure
4-18
Table of Content
4.5.8
4-22
4.5.9
4-25
Hospital Facilities
4.6
4-25
4.6.1
4-26
4.6.2
4-26
4.6.3
Central Highlands
4-26
CHAPTER 5
Policies
5-1
5.1
5-2
5.2
5-4
5.3
Modernising Agriculture
5-10
5.4
5-14
5.5
5-17
5.6
5-32
5.7
5-44
5.8
5-51
CHAPTER 6
Implementation Mechanism
6-1
6.1
6-1
6.1.1
6-1
6.1.2
6-1
6.1.3
6-3
6.1.4
6-5
6.1.5
6.2
Plan Implementation
6.2.1
6.3
6.4
6.5
6-8
6-9
6-13
6.2.2
6-14
6.2.3
6-14
Plan Monitoring
6-15
6.3.1
Scope of Monitoring
6-15
6.3.2
Monitoring Agencies
6-15
6.3.3
6-15
6-24
6.4.1
6-25
Proposals
6-25
ii
Table of Content
List of Figures
Figure 1.1
1-1
Figure 3.1
3-3
Figure 3.2
Figure 3.3
3-8
3-10
Figure 3.4
3-12
Figure 3.5
3-17
Figure 3.6
3-22
Figure 4.1
Figure 4.2
IP 1
5-3
IP 2
5-8
IP 3
5-11
IP 4
5-13
IP 5
5-16
IP 6
Hierarchy of Conurbations
5-24
IP 7
5-30
IP 8
5-35
IP 9
5-38
IP 10
5-40
IP 11
5-42
IP 12
5-43
IP 13
5-47
IP 14
5-54
IP 15
5-55
IP 16
5-58
IP 17
5-60
Figure 6.1
6-2
Figure 6.2
6-4
Figure 6.3
6-21
Figure 6.4
6-21
Figure 6.5
Figure 6.6
4-4
4-13
6-24
6-25
iii
Table of Content
List of Tables
Table 3.1
3-5
Table 3.2
3-6
Table 3.3
3-7
Table 3.4
3-9
Table 3.5
3-13
Table 3.6
3-13
Table 3.7
3-14
Table 3.8
3-16
Table 3.9
3-21
Table 3.10
3-26
Table 3.11
3-29
Table 4.1
4-9
Table 4.2
4-12
Table 4.3
4-18
Table 4.4
4-23
Table 5.1
5-18
Table 5.2
5-32
Table 6.1
6-6
Table 6.2
6-7
Table 6.3
6-7
Table 6.4
6-10
Table 6.5
6-16
Table 6.6
6-26
iv
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
NATIONAL PHYSICAL PLAN
Executive Summary
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
INTRODUCTION
National economic planning has been practised in Malaysia since independence and has
successfully guided the transformation of the country from an economy dependent on mining and
plantation agriculture to one which is diversified and largely industrialised. Nevertheless, a gap in
national development planning is recognised. Spatial planning has been delegated to the local
level, to be dealt with in state plans and local plans. This has permitted states and local
authorities to be uncoordinated and unguided in their interpretation of their share of the national
objectives. The result is that the sum total of state and local plans far exceeds national targets as
well as national resources to implement them. The National Physical Plan (NPP) is intended to fill
this gap and provide the framework for national physical planning.
In fulfilling the recognised gap in national development planning, the functions of the NPP include:
i.
ii.
iii. providing the framework for regional, state and local planning;
iv. providing physical planning policies.
The core function of the NPP will be to translate the socio-economic objectives of Vision 2020,
OPP 3 and 8 MP, as well as national sectoral objectives, into the spatial dimension to guide the
geographical distribution of these objectives among the states and, through the states, among the
local areas.
SALIENT FEATURES
The Town and Country Planning Act 1976 (Amendment) 2001, A1129 provides the legal basis for
the preparation of the NPP and describes its form, which shall:
i.
Executive Summary
ii.
iii.
The NPP shall be prepared through a consultative process between the Federal Government and
the State Governments and shall take into consideration the current national urbanisation policy
and other similar policies. The NPP is currently confined to Peninsular Malaysia and does not
apply to Sabah and Sarawak which are governed by different planning legislations.
The Act stipulates that the Plan be reviewed every five years in tandem with the review of the
National Five Year Development Plans. However, it is unlikely that all aspects of the Plan will be
changed at the Review as certain proposals require permanency. These include areas designated
for conservation or set aside for the protection of water resources. Other development proposals
such as major national infrastructure constructions may also require continual implementation
over decades. The NPP shall have both a short term perspective in accommodating the socioeconomic objectives of the FYMP and the long term perspective of Vision 2020.
GOAL
OBJECTIVES
ii.
Executive Summary
PRINCIPLES
In support of the objectives of the NPP, the following plan principles shall be adhered to in the
NPP:
P1
P2
P3
P4
P5
P6
Favour public transport over private vehicle use for inter-urban and intra-city
movement.
P7
P8
P9
P10
PLAN CONTEXT
The NPP recognises the features in the current context within which it must succeed in fulfilling its
role in national development.
7.1
Global Setting
7.2
Executive Summary
National Setting
A number of important features in the national setting, including both long-standing conditions and
emergent trends, constrain strategic development options.
These features include:
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
8.1
Urbanisation
As only the conurbations around Kuala Lumpur, George Town and Johor Bahru are anticipated to
have the capacity to compete successfully against international city regions such as Shanghai,
Hong Kong, Shenzhen, Singapore, Bangkok and so on, a development strategy of Selective
Concentration is recommended by the NPP. The strategy is applied to development location for
the manufacturing and service sectors, in particular the nascent and emergent sectors of ICT,
biotechnology, education and health services and (non-resort) tourism, and the appropriate type
of infrastructure to be put in place to attract investments for these sectors. State capitals outside
of the conurbations that are not anticipated to have a competitive capacity shall, however, be
supported in terms of their need for services and facilities. Small and intermediate towns shall be
developed according to their special features and their local economic niches. Urban-rural
economic linkages are to be promoted to support the structural changes taking place in
agriculture and to harness the benefits of urbanisation to benefit the rural population.
4
Executive Summary
Development in the rural areas should be concentrated in the Rural Growth Centres and rural
services should be reviewed to be more appropriate to the changing rural population structure.
8.2
Regional Balance
Notwithstanding addressing the issue of global competitiveness, the NPP must also address the
issue of regional imbalance. This should be carried out while avoiding internal competition and at
the same time optimising available resources. The strategies adopted should be realistic and
capable of success. Regional balance is, therefore, interpreted as access to equitable levels of
income and not necessarily as equal opportunity to the same forms of development. Resourcebased industries, forestry-based activities and industries, downstream agriculture-based activities,
resort tourism, including eco-tourism, craft-based industries and other niche activities should be
directed to the less developed regions and appropriate infrastructure in these regions enhanced
to support the activities.
8.3
As a physical plan, it is incumbent on the NPP to re-examine the sectoral distribution of land use
to ensure the optimal use of land. Agriculture is not expected to be expanding in acreage but in
productivity. The greatest demand for land will be in urban expansion but the quantum of land
required is relatively small compared to the potential land available for urban development.
However, local planning will be required to adjust to the location of the available land. To assist
local planning land is categorised according to their agricultural importance to the country,
agricultural productivity and environment sensitivity, and ranked. The objective of the ranking
system is to enable the determination of land for immediate conversion to other uses or for longterm conservation.
8.4
With the absence of a need to make large areas of forest land available for agriculture or for
urban use, there is an opportunity to articulate the proposals of the various national councils that
have expressed concern regarding the natural environment, such as the Forestry Council, the
Coastal Zone Council and the Environmental Council. In response, the NPP proposes the
delineation of a forest Central Spine which will be linked to other conservation areas.
Future water supply needs will also be safeguarded by conserving potential river and
underground sources of water.
8.5
Executive Summary
In national transportation the NPP proposes the long-term commitment to a fast-train system and
in local transportation a commitment to favour public transport.
Infrastructure shall be examined as appropriate to the particular areas and their expectations of
development.
POLICIES
NPP 1
The NPP shall serve as the framework to achieve integrated and sustainable
land use planning in the country.
NPP 2
The planning of urban based activities shall adopt the concept of selective
concentration for strategic urban centres for all states.
NPP 3
NPP 4
Land and natural resources of the less developed regions shall be used in a
sustainable manner to increase the productivity in these regions and reduce
regional imbalances.
NPP 5
Planning for industrial land development shall adopt the concept of Industrial
Clusters.
NPP 6
NPP 7
The eight (8) strategic granary areas comprising Muda (MADA), Kemubu
(KADA), IADP Kerian-Sungai Manik, IADP Barat Laut Selangor, IADP Pulau
Pinang, IADP Seberang Perak, IADP Terengganu Utara (KETARA) and IADP
Kemasin- Semerak shall be conserved.
NPP 8
Executive Summary
NPP 9
NPP 10
The growth of the four main conurbations of Kuala Lumpur, George Town,
Johor Bahru and Kuantan shall be supported.
NPP 11
NPP 12
The individuality and physical separation of the cities, towns and villages
within the conurbation shall be maintained.
NPP 13
NPP 14
NPP 15
NPP 16
NPP 17
NPP 18
NPP 19
NPP 20
Executive Summary
NPP 21
NPP 22
NPP 23
NPP 24
NPP 25
The national road network shall be further extended for regional travel and
local access
NPP 26
NPP 27
NPP 28
NPP 29
The NPP shall provide the spatial framework for the delivery of integrated
infrastructure services at the national and regional level and to the main
conurbations
NPP 30
The supply and projected demand for water by quantity and location should
guide the planning of water resource areas.
NPP 31
Ground water resources and recharge areas shall be identified and protected
from activities that cause pollution and reduce yield
8
NPP 32
Executive Summary
NPP 33
NPP 34
Land utilised for main drains, streams and rivers shall be designated as
drainage or river reserves
NPP 35
NPP 36
10
IMPLEMENTATION MECHANISM
The institutional responsibilities for the preparation, implementation, monitoring and review of the
Plan are shown in the following table:
Activity
Responsibility
Enabling
Law
Enabling Instruments/Institutions
Plan preparation
DG DTCP
TCPA
Plan Implementation
TCPA
DG DTCP
TCPA
DG DTCP
TCPA
Monitoring
Land use
changes
Application
of the
policies
Plan Review
The Director General of the Department of Town and Country Planning (DG DTCP) is charged
with the responsibility of preparing the Plan, monitoring its implementation and keeping it in
review every five years. In carrying out this responsibility the Director-General will rely on the
capacity of his department and a number of bodies that have been provided by the Town and
Country Planning Act 1976 (TCPA), proposed in the Plan or administratively employed in the
current planning process, such as the NPPC, the National Physical Planning Committee (NPP
Com.), National Physical Planning Advisory Committee (NPPAC), IAPGs and TWGs.
9
Executive Summary
The Implementation of the Plan, however, will require the support of the various federal and state
agencies that have a legal duty to adhere to the policies of the NPP. It is important that the
proposals are translated into plans of action and included in the subsequent Five Year Malaysia
Plans (FYMP) through the offices of the EPU, Treasury and the NDPC.
Adherence to the recommendations of the NPP should also be manifested in the respective
Structure Plans. One of the key instruments for monitoring the Plan and keeping it in review is
the establishment of the NPP Land use Planning Intelligent System (LaPiS) to ensure effective
exchange of both spatial and attribute data that is necessary to prepare the plan and its review.
The policies of the NPP will remain applicable unless reviewed or replaced. In carrying out the
review, the DG DTCP will rely on the directions of the NPPC and the advice of the NPP Com. and
NPPAC, as well as the application of indicators and research findings to assess their
effectiveness.
reference on matters that need to be reviewed. Appropriate IAPGs and TWGs should also be
established to provide adequate inputs for the Review.
In conclusion the main recommendations made for the implementation of the NPP are as follow:
i
Establish the necessary institutional structure for plan preparation and monitoring.
This will include among others, the strengthening of the National Physical
Planning Division in DTCP, the establishment of the NPP Committee, NPPAC,
relevant IAPGs and TWGs, as well as a National Spatial Planning Research
Institute to generate information and thinking about national and regional physical
planning.
ii
Once the NPP is approved the various federal and state agencies need to
translate these policies into programmes and projects and include them in the
subsequent FYMP.
iii
The DG DTCP should be made a permanent member of the NDPC to ensure that
the aspirations of the NPP are incorporated into the subsequent FYMP.
iv
Establishment of the LaPiS at DTCP and the Structure Plan land use Planning
Intelligent System (SLAPiS) at the State Departments of Town and Country
Planning.
10
Preamble
PREAMBLE
National economic planning has been practised in Malaysia since independence and has
successfully guided the transformation of the country from an economy dependent on mining and
plantation agriculture to one which is diversified and largely industrialised. National economic
planning has brought to the country a level of prosperity that is the envy of other developing
countries. Nevertheless, a gap in national development planning is recognised. This is planning in
the physical, geographical or spatial dimension. Hitherto spatial planning has been delegated to
the local level, to be dealt with in state plans and local plans. This has permitted states and local
authorities to be uncoordinated and unguided in their interpretation of their share of the national
objectives. The result is that the sum total of state and local plans far exceeds national targets as
well as national resources to implement them.
Land conversion in many states and use provisions in many local authority areas far exceed
demand and over optimistic development approvals have led to property overhangs. Internecine
rivalry between states and between cities for development have led to, on the one hand, the
duplication and wastage of types of infrastructure that are intended to attract development and, on
the other hand, neglect in public investments in types of infrastructure that should be carried out
to support the development already in place. For example, while urban highways and mega
shopping complexes are given much local authority attention, sewerage systems, public
transportation and flood mitigation projects lag behind.
The need for a national physical plan has been felt and debated over many years. Currently,
some attempt at spatial planning to reconcile inter-state and inter-city competition is carried out on
an ad hoc basis by national agencies like the Economic Planning Unit and Treasury through the
project approval process. These agencies will be better able to carry out their functions with the
availability of a standing guideline and framework on the geographical distribution of physical
development. The National Physical Plan (NPP) is intended to provide this framework. The
framework is intended not only for project approval but also for states and local authorities to
formulate their development plans and strategies, and to identify development projects, in a more
realistic, focussed and co-operative manner.
The NPP will complement the existing efforts in national development planning which has tended
to be socio-economic biased. Economic targets of the Five Year Malaysia Plans (FYMP) and the
goals of Vision 2020 will be translated into spatial terms in the NPP. The Plan will also provide
the coordinative platform for the various sectoral plans and policies and establish the much
needed framework for the preparation of Structure and Local Plans. The NPP is also a response
to the impact of globalisation which requires the country to establish a national physical
framework that will enhance the countrys global competitiveness.
The yardsticks for measuring development have also changed over the years from merely
economic growth indicators and outputs to those that measure the quality of life and a
development that is sustainable. The NPP is one of the instruments for achieving quality in the
living environment and sustainable development. It will serve as a long term national physical plan
providing directions and trends on the development, use and conservation of land in the country.
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 1
Development planning is practised at all three tiers of government. At the national level,
development planning will be guided by the FYMP, the NPP and the sector policies that emanate
from Cabinet, the respective Ministries and Sector Councils. Contextually development planning
in the country will operate within the stated goals outlined in Vision 2020 and the Outline
Perspective Plans (OPP3) (Figure 1.1). Similarly at the state level, development will be guided by
the Structure Plans and sector policies that are articulated from time to time. Local level planning
will be carried out in the form of statutory development plans such as the Local Plans and Special
Area Plans for the local authority areas.
Figure 1.1 : National Development Planning Framework
VISION 2020
NATIONAL
PHYSICAL PLAN
5 - YEAR
MALAYSIA PLAN
SECTORAL
POLICIES/ PLANS
STATE
DEVELOPMENT PLAN
REGIONAL /
STRUCTURE PLAN
SECTORAL POLICIES/
PLANS
LOCAL
PLAN
SPECIAL AREA
PLAN
Vision 2020
The long-term vision statement for the country, Vision 2020, states the aspiration
of the nation. The nation shall become, by the year 2020, fully developed along
all the dimensions: economically, politically, socially, spiritually, psychologically
and culturally. The strategy to achieve this vision is by a high level of economic
1-1
The current Outline Perspective Plan is the Third Outline Perspective Plan 20012010 (OPP3). This, essentially, is a ten year outline plan which forms the
framework for the preparation of the FYMP. A central objective of OPP3 is
national unity. Its concentration is at forging a united nation consisting of a
progressive and dynamic Bangsa Malaysia that lives in harmony and engages
in full and fair partnership. OPP3 will focus on enhancing regional balance
through rapid development of the less developed states. Efforts will be taken to
diversify the economic base of the slower growing states into manufacturing and
services with emphasis to be given to development of downstream activities in
the agriculture sector, such as in handling, processing, packaging and marketing
of agro-products, and the development of agro-based industries. Another aim of
the plan is to reduce urban rural disparities and improve and strengthen the
linkages between urban and rural economies.
The current Five-Year Development Plan is the Eighth Malaysia Plan 2001-2005
(8 MP) which identifies the growing sectors of the economy as services and
manufacturing. It confirms further need for the promotion of direct foreign
investments and recognises that industrialisation for the future will be faced with
intensifying competition among countries for investments, production and
markets. The implementation and further elaboration of free trade agreements
among nations will engender the deepening of globalisation and make
competition intense.
Structure Plans
Structure Plans distribute the expectation of development within each state and
propose major economic and infrastructure projects for the states. The time
perspective for Structure Plans is 20 years, and for the current set of Structure
Plans, commensurate with the time perspective of Vision 2020.
Regional Plans
With reference to the Town and Country Planning Act 1976 (Amendment) 2001,
A1129, Regional Plans are prepared for areas situated in two or more states
where there are significant issues pertaining to cross border development. Each
plan is prepared by an appointed Regional Planning Committee for the purpose
of guiding and coordinating development within the relevant region. These plans
1-2
will serve to assist the State Planning Committees and the local planning
authorities within the region on appropriate development measures for the region
that will optimise the use of infrastructure and social facilities, coordinate
development, avoid duplication of investments and promote the conservation of
natural resources. Regional Plans may also be prepared for the Conurbations
identified in the NPP covering a number of local authority areas.
Local Plans
Local Plans are designated as the Development Plans by the Town and Country
Planning Act 1976 and provide the vehicles for development control. In addition
to setting the direction of development for a local planning authority area, Local
Plans serve, by their consultative process of preparation, as contractual
agreements on the use of all land within the plan areas between the local
planning authorities and the local residents and land owners. Local Plans are,
therefore, besides being guides for development, also a basis of democratic
governance and the protection of citizen rights.
National, state and local plans are intended to operate as a cohesive and collectively
supportive system directed to achieve Vision 2020. National plans are framed within a
time perspective while state and local plans have both a spatial and a time perspective. A
spatial framework at the national level is, however, currently absent. The National
Physical Plan (NPP) fulfils this missing role.
In addition to the various development plans, national sectoral policies such as the
National Forestry Policy, National Agricultural Policy, etc. as well as various sectoral
plans of varying status, require to be expressed spatially.
1.1
Function
The function of the NPP includes:
1.2
i.
dimension to national
ii.
iii.
iv.
Legal Framework
The Town and Country Planning Act 1976 (Amendment) 2001, A1129 provides the legal
basis for the preparation of the NPP.
1-3
1.3
Form
The form of the NPP shall [Town and Country Planning Act 1976]:
1.4
i.
ii.
iii.
Consultative Process
The NPP shall be prepared through a consultative process. When preparing the NPP, the
Director General of Town and Country Planning shall take into consideration the current
national urbanisation policy and other similar policies. The Director General shall consult
with every State Authority and such other authorities or bodies as the Council may direct.
This consultative process ensures that state and local aspirations are taken into
consideration in the NPP.
1.5
Plan Area
The NPP is currently confined to Peninsular Malaysia. The Plan does not apply to Sabah
and Sarawak which are governed by different planning legislations.
1.6
Plan Period
Once the Plan is approved the policies of the NPP will take effect unless they are
subsequently altered or replaced. In view of changing socio-economic circumstances of
the country, the Act stipulates that the Plan be reviewed every five years in tandem with
the review of the National Five Year Development Plans, or as and when directed by the
Council.
It is unlikely that all aspects of the Plan will be changed at the Review as certain aspects
of the Plan will require permanency. These include areas designated for conservation or
set aside for the protection of water resources. Other development proposals such as
major national infrastructure constructions may also require continual implementation
over decades or require follow-up phases. The NPP shall have both a short term
perspective in accommodating the socio-economic objectives of the FYMP and the long
term perspective of Vision 2020.
1-4
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 2
The goal, objectives and principles of the NPP reflect the desire of the nation, as interpreted from
the Town and Country Planning Act 1976, to ensure that physical planning creates the spatial
patterns, structures, institutions and guidelines necessary to support socio-economic planning.
The technical findings on the existing situation, trends, potentials and threats assist in refining the
goal, objectives and principles and provide the basis for formulating the strategies and policies
that, in turn, provide tangible sets of action for implementing the NPP.
2.1
Goal
Basic to all national planning is the countrys aspiration of attaining developed country
status as encapsulated in Vision 2020. A particular onus placed on physical planning is
the creation of a quality and efficient physical environment that will be the foundation for
the high quality of life, economic prosperity, political unity and social vibrancy envisioned
in Vision 2020. Subsumed within this overall objective is the integral need to increase
efficiency, regional balance, sustainability and a strong global positioning of the country.
The NPP will provide the translation of the national plans into the physical and spatial
dimension.
The NPP goal is:
THE ESTABLISHMENT OF AN EFFICIENT, EQUITABLE AND SUSTAINABLE
NATIONAL SPATIAL FRAMEWORK TO GUIDE THE OVERALL DEVELOPMENT OF
THE COUNTRY TOWARDS ACHIEVING DEVELOPED NATION STATUS BY 2020
2.2
Objectives
Arising from this goal, four mutually supportive objectives are identified:
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
To secure spatial and environmental quality and diversity for a high quality of life.
2-1
Objective I :
In order to sustain the high level of investments of around 7.0 % per annum necessary to
achieve developed nation status by 2020 the country must be economically efficient and
globally competitive over the plan period of Vision 2020. Malaysia will, to a large extent,
be dependent on foreign investments and, as envisaged by 8 MP, global competition for
investments, as well as for markets, will become increasingly fierce. From the spatial
planning perspective this strife for efficiency and investment attractiveness would include
the need to focus development activities in selected areas that offer the best growth
potential. From the physical planning perspective it would involve the creation of a quality
living environment with an integrated and efficient infrastructure.
Objective II :
The many economic sectors, human social activities and environmental protection
concerns vie for land. The NPP must seek not only to allocate land for the various uses to
meet their needs but also, through sensitive calibration of the quantum of land allocated
to each sector, activity or concern, seek to achieve overall efficiency and optimum use of
land. Land wastage in the form of idle land and low productivity land in any of the
economic sectors should be eliminated. Land use allocation will, however, be very largely
constrained by the existing land use pattern and natural topographical conditions.
Each economic sector is faced with a different set of problems and opportunities that will
indicate, in broad terms, its future land requirements. Agriculture, for example, faces the
necessity to increase productivity rather than expansion in acreage while forestry, with
the increasing demand for tropical timber, has the opportunity for expansion in acreage.
Expansion of forestry acreage, however, cannot involve natural forests because of the
time horizon involved but with forest plantations.
The greatest demand for land in the NPP plan period will, however, come from urban
expansion. Of the 8.3 million additional population projected for the period 2000-2020,
8.0 million or 96.0% will be the additional urban population. However, the total amount of
land necessary to house this population is very small no more than 0.33 million
hectares while the land that is identified as potentially available for various uses which
could include urban purposes estimated at about 574,053 ha. Total land required for
urban use, including existing built-up areas, will amount to only 5.8% of the land area of
Peninsular Malaysia. In principle, therefore, there is no necessity for urban expansion to
encroach into land that should be protected or conserved for one purpose or another, nor
is there any necessity for carrying out large scale land reclamation works. Local planning
may, however, need to adjust to the location of available land.
An important role of the NPP is to consolidate the categorisation and ranking of land and
apply land categorisation and ranking to land use control, particularly to guiding
conversion of land for urban uses.
2-2
uses should not be disorderly, indiscriminate and inefficient. Findings of the studies
carried out indicate that there is no shortage of poor quality agriculture land for
conversion to urban uses. There is, therefore, every reason to conserve what remains of
the natural environment for the edification and enjoyment of the present and future
generations and for the overall enhancement of the national environment.
2.3
Principles
The following are principles that support the above objectives. While some of these
principles are directly relevant to a single objective, most are relevant to more than one
objective.
P1
P2
P3
P4
P6
Favour public transport over private vehicle use for inter-urban and intracity movement
This will require the development of an efficient inter-urban public transport
system featuring high speed trains, low fare domestic flights, public buses on
highways and city centre transportation hubs. For intra-city travel more efforts
shall be made to develop further the extent and efficiency of trains, taxis and
buses.
P7
2-5
P8
P9
P10
2-6
CHAPTER 3
PLAN CONTEXT
NATIONAL PHYSICAL PLAN
Plan Context
CHAPTER 3
PLAN CONTEXT
Vision 2020, OPP3 and 8MP as well as the national sectoral policies have established the general
guidelines for socio-economic management of the country. The basis of the national vision,
objectives and policies, however, rests upon the foundation of the countrys physical setting as
well as its past and present economic and social environments. As each of these environments
are multifaceted, inseparable and intimately linked to one another, a change in one environment
impacts upon the others in foreseeable and unforeseeable, short and long term, positive and
negative ways.
The approach adopted by the NPP has been to recognise the significance of the interrelationships
of these environments and to assess the issues of spatial relationship in a holistic, integrated and
balanced approach. This approach recognises and accepts that the various types of land use
activities have generally arranged themselves in geographic space in relatively distinct patterns.
In the Peninsular Malaysia context, at the broadest scale, this pattern has been formed by the
physical environment of a western coast, a highland spine and eastern coast area. This pattern of
land use is further reinforced by historical and economic factors which have resulted in a heavier
concentration of population and higher productivity economic activities taking place on the
western coastal plain relative to the other areas. The impact of these factors has resulted in
variations in social and economic makeup of the Peninsula which underlie a number of provisions
included in the national development plans. An underlying intent of all of the various national
development programmes is the need to identify the factors which drive the economy so as to
better understand and manage the challenges facing the countrys future.
Of no less importance to the development of the country is the global setting within which
Malaysia, as a developing country, must operate. The emergent situation of increasing
competition within a globalising world requires that the country must select development
strategies that do not jeopardise her ability to compete successfully for international investments.
In resolving internal development issues Malaysia must take cognisance of the limitations that the
world setting may place on her range of possibilities, especially when the possibilities may be
mutually exclusive, and prioritise the issues to be resolved. For example, fast growth may have to
take priority over balanced development if the choice between the two is mutually exclusive. The
NPP will, however, seek to optimise the choice of possibilities.
The NPP constitutes an integral part of the management plans. It seeks to add a spatial or
geographic dimension to the more purely economic and social biased aspects of the development
plans. This spatial element of the NPP is directed at ensuring sustainable and efficient utilisation
of the countrys natural resources, optimum use of its existing capital as well as its human
resources while at the same time, seeking to provide for equitable access to the opportunities
afforded by the development of the country.
3-1
3.1
Global Setting
3.1.1
World Trade
Plan Context
th
Malaysia ranks 18 in terms of the value of exports and imports in the year 2000. The
significance of these relatively high rankings brings with it the burden of contagion
whereby changes in economic and or geopolitical circumstances can flow back into the
Malaysian economy. The mid to late 1990s international monetary crisis and the general
under performance of the major economies of the developed countries such as America,
Japan and Europe led to an overall decline in Malaysias average Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) growth rates. This prevailing situation which has been exacerbated by
geopolitical issues is also only part of a much larger and more pervasive process of
change which is often referred to as globalisation, a process whereby macro and indeed
micro economic activities around the world are increasingly being integrated, interrelated
and interlinked.
In a similar vein, the economic emergence of China and India has resulted in a changed
competitive platform for trade and investment in the global market. Latin America and
Central European countries are also offering attractive investment opportunities which will
compete for resources from the USA and Europe.
At the regional level, China and India have become attractive investment destinations and
centres for low to medium level technology products at competitive prices. These
changes have offered opportunities for Malaysian investors to internationalise and yet, at
the same time have challenged a variety of traditionally secure Malaysian industries and
enterprises.
Malaysia, in recognising its abilities and weaknesses and in particular its relatively small
market size, has adopted a number of strategies aimed at minimising the risks of
volatility, bolstering economic resilience, enhancing competition, stimulating increased
private investment, venturing into new sources of growth, accelerating transformation to a
high technology and knowledge based economy, increasing the supply of quality human
capital as well as promoting a more equitable and exemplary value-based society.
3.1.2
International Organisations
At the international level implementation of these measures include participation in the
United Nation (UN), World Trade Organization (WTO), Organisation of Islamic Countries
(OIC) and other global reach organisations as well as regional and sub regional
groupings aimed at mutually enhanced economic activity. In particular these latter
agreements include ASEAN, ASEAN Free Trade Agreement (AFTA), and the IndonesiaMalaysia-Singapore Growth Triangle, the Indonesia-Malaysia-Thailand Growth Triangle
and the Brunei Darussalam-Malaysia-Philippines East ASEAN growth area (Figure 3.1).
3-2
Plan Context
Malaysia, on the whole has benefited from the globalisation process through foreign
direct investments of the early 1990s. Even so, two emerging trends of the globalisation
process must be addressed if the country is to at least maintain its present status. The
first of these is to accept the changing circumstances associated with greater competition
for foreign direct investments and secondly to engage with the more developed countries
in the use of ICT and technology to enhance productivity and quality as well as niche
market products and processes.
The preparation of the NPP forms part of the governments response to the challenges of
globalisation. Among the responses adopted has been for an increased emphasis to be
placed upon the private sector to be the core of the national engine of growth. The
government sectors role will be more of facilitator through institutional support and as a
provider of infrastructure.
3.2
National Setting
To facilitate comparisons with other countries of the region as well as the world at large,
broad based population and economic criteria have been adopted to describe Malaysias
past and projected performance.
3.2.1
While overall growth has been significant, an even more notable impact with respect to
population has been the movement of people from one state to another over the past 20
3-4
Plan Context
years. The northern and eastern regions for example have suffered relative declines
(35.0% to 27.1% and 19.5% to 17.3% respectively) in their shares of Peninsula
population while the central region has been a major recipient of people with its share
rising from 33.1% to 40.5%. Johor by comparison has basically managed to sustain its
population share.
This pattern of migration reflects the development of the country and in particular the rise
of the manufacturing and services sectors.
Table 3.1: Distribution of Population and AAGR (%) by State, 1980, 1991, 2000 and 2020
Population Size
State/ Region
1980
Perlis
1991
2000
AAGR (%)
1980
1991
2000
2020
19801991
19912000
20002020
148,276
190,182
204,450
250.0
1.3
1.3
1.1
0.9
2.29
0.81
1.01
1,116,140
1,364,504
1,649,756
2,363.9
9.8
9.2
8.9
8.8
1.84
2.13
1.81
954,638
1,116,801
1,313,449
1,940.3
8.4
7.5
7.1
7.2
1.44
1.82
1.97
Perak
1,805,198
1,974,893
2,051,236
2,720.2
15.8
13.3
11.1
10.1
0.82
0.42
1.42
Northern Region
4,024,252
4,646,380
5,218,891
7,274.4
35.2
31.4
28.2
27.1
1.32
1.30
1.67
Selangor
1,515,537
2,413,567
4,188,876
6,981.5
13.3
16.3
22.6
26.0
4.32
6.32
2.59
WP Kuala Lumpur
977,102
1,226,708
1,379,310
1,868.6
8.6
8.3
7.4
7.0
2.09
1.31
1.53
Negeri Sembilan
573,578
722,017
859,924
1,110.4
5.0
4.9
4.6
4.1
2.11
1.96
1.29
Melaka
464,754
529,199
635,791
904.3
4.1
3.6
3.4
3.4
1.19
2.06
1.78
Central Region
3,530,971
4,891,491
7,063,901
10,864.8
30.9
33.1
38.1
40.5
3.01
4.17
2.18
Johor
1,638,229
2,162,357
2,740,625
4,042.2
14.3
14.6
14.8
15.1
2.56
2.67
1.96
Southern Region
1,638,229
2,162,357
2,740,625
4,042.2
14.3
14.6
14.8
15.1
2.56
2.67
1.96
Pahang
798,782
1,081,148
1,288,376
1,731.3
7.0
7.3
7.0
6.5
2.79
1.97
1.49
Terengganu
540,626
808,556
898,825
1,147.7
4.7
5.5
4.9
4.3
3.73
1.18
1.23
Kelantan
893,753
1,207,684
1,313,014
1,749.3
7.8
8.2
7.1
6.5
2.77
0.93
1.44
2,233,161
3,097,388
3,500,215
4,628.3
19.5
20.9
18.9
17.3
3.02
1.37
1.41
11,426,613
14,797,616
18,523,632
26,809.7
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
2.38
2.53
1.87
83.1
80.5
79.6
Kedah
Pulau Pinang
Eastern Region
Peninsular Malaysia
% of Penisular Malaysia
East Malaysia
MALAYSIA
2,318,628
3,582,039
4,751,058
16.9
19.5
20.4
4.03
3.19
13,745,241
18,379,655
23,274,690
100.0
100.0
100.0
2.68
2.66
Source: General Report of the Population Census, Volume 1 and 2, Census 1991, DOS
Population Distribution and Basic Demographic Characteristics, Census 2000, DOS
Note :
ii.
Urban-Rural Population
The criteria adopted in the population census allows for the differentiation of urban and
rural communities. The pattern of change evident in the Table 3.2 highlights the changing
character of Malaysias economy associated with the emergence of the manufacturing
and lately, the services sectors.
3-5
Plan Context
2000
Urban
Northern
Region
2,277,177
51.4
2,150,525
48.6
Central
Region
3,358,736
72.4
1,282,983
989,910
47.8
Eastern
Region
1,053,324
Peninsular
Malaysia
7,679,147
Southern
Region
Rural
Urban
2020
Rural
Urban
Rural
2,974,000 57.0
2,244,891
43.0
5,130.90
70.5
2,143.50 29.5
27.6
5,933,309 84.0
1,130,592
16.0
9,818.00
90.4
1,046.80
1,079,830
52.2
1,787,533 65.2
953,092
34.8
2,868.00
71.0
1,174.20 29.0
35.2
1,939,238
64.8
1,427,248 40.8
2,072,967
59.2
2,302.70
49.8
2,325.60 50.2
54.3
6,452,576
45.7
12,122,090 65.4
6,401,542
34.6
20,119.6
75.0
6,690.1 25.0
Source: (1) 1991 - Preliminary Count Report for Urban and Rural Areas, Census 2000, DOS
(2) 2000 - Population Distribution and Basic Demographic Characteristics, Census 2000, DOS
The pattern in 2000 for the country as a whole showed 62.0% residing in urban areas
while for the Peninsular this has risen to 65.4% or 12.1 million people.
On a regional basis, the Central Region which registered with the highest percentage of
urban residents in 1991 at 72.4% also recorded the highest percentage in 2000 at 84.0%.
While the Eastern Region recorded the lowest levels of urbanisation (which covers the
highlands and eastern coastal plain lands) the pattern of increasing urbanisation was also
noted where the urban residents rose from 35.2% in 1991 to 40.8% in 2000.
This pattern of increasing urbanisation of the population is expected to continue up to
2020 when it is anticipated at least 75.0% of the Peninsula population will reside in urban
areas. Table 3.3 shows the urban-rural population by 5 year interval 2000-2020.
On the other hand, Malaysias rural population has declined from 6.45 million or 45.7% in
1991 to 6.40 million or 34.6% in 2000. While still managing a small absolute growth in
numbers to 6.69 million persons, its relative share is expected to fall to around 25.0% by
2020.
The implications arising from this change in the rural areas will be rising incomes and
rising productivity as rural enterprises adjust to the reduced availability of local and
indeed, foreign labour. For the small holders, in particular, shifts to planting of less labour
intensive crops is also expected with agro forestry offering attractive sustainable yields as
a medium-long term alternative to oil palm, rubber and other high maintenance crops.
3-6
9.6
2005
2010
2015
2020
Urban
Rural
Total
Urban
Rural
Total
Urban
Rural
Total
Urban
Rural
Total
Urban
Rural
Total
Perlis
70.1
134.4
204.5
82.9
130.3
213.2
89.4
136.0
225.4
96.4
137.7
234.1
104.0
146.0
250.0
Kedah
648.0
1,001.8
1,649.8
775.7
1,015.7
1,791.4
924.8
1,114.0
2,038.8
1,034.2
1,147.7
2,181.9
1,170.0
1,193.9
2,363.9
Pulau Pinang
1,052.1
261.4
1,313.4
1,209.7
242.5
1,452.2
1,391.0
235.5
1,626.5
1,614.0
225.8
1,839.8
1,746.0
194.3
1,940.3
Perak
1,203.9
847.4
2,051.2
1,424.8
757.2
2,182.0
1,624.3
724.1
2,348.4
1,851.7
675.7
2,527.4
2,110.9
609.3
2,720.2
Northern Region
2,974.0
2,244.9
5,218.9
3,493.1
2,145.7
5,638.8
4,029.6
2,209.5
6,239.1
4,596.3
2,186.9
6,783.2
5,130.9
2,143.5
7,274.4
Selangor
3,667.5
521.4
4,188.9
4,699.0
370.0
5,069.0
5,252.4
387.4
5,639.8
5,871.1
403.8
6,274.9
6,562.6
418.9
6,981.5
1,379.3
1,379.3
1,581.0
1,581.0
1,671.6
1,671.6
1,767.4
1,767.4
1,868.6
1,868.6
459.3
400.7
859.9
528.3
379.4
907.7
578.9
391.9
970.8
634.3
403.9
1,038.2
695.0
415.4
1,110.4
Melaka
427.3
208.5
635.8
512.8
168.2
681.0
566.6
181.9
748.5
626.1
196.6
822.7
691.8
212.5
904.3
Central Region
5,933.3
1,130.6
7,063.9
7,321.1
917.6
8,238.7
8,069.5
961.2
9,030.7
8,898.8
1,004.4
9,903.2
9,818.0
1,046.8
10,864.8
Johor
1,787.5
953.1
2,740.6
2,086.8
933.2
3,020.0
2,320.2
1,008.0
3,328.2
2,579.6
1,088.3
3,667.9
2,868.0
1,174.2
4,042.2
Southern Region
1,787.5
953.1
2,740.6
2,086.8
933.2
3,020.0
2,320.2
1,008.0
3,328.2
2,579.6
1,088.3
3,667.9
2,868.0
1,174.2
4,042.2
Pahang
540.9
747.5
1,288.4
600.6
764.5
1,365.1
716.1
761.5
1,477.6
853.8
745.6
1,599.4
1,018.0
713.3
1,731.3
Terengganu
437.5
461.3
898.8
507.5
505.5
1,013.0
542.5
513.5
1,056.0
580.0
520.9
1,100.9
620.0
527.7
1,147.7
Kelantan
448.9
864.1
1,313.0
494.7
853.3
1,348.0
545.9
924.4
1,470.3
602.4
1,001.4
1,603.8
664.7
1,084.6
1,749.3
1,427.2
2,073.0
3,500.2
1,602.8
2,123.3
3,726.1
1,804.6
2,199.3
4,003.9
2,036.2
2,267.9
4,304.1
2,302.7
2,325.6
4,628.3
12,122.1
6,401.5
18,523.6
14,503.8
6,119.8
20,623.6
16,223.8
6,378.1
22,601.9
18,110.9
6,547.5
24,658.4
20,119.6
6,690.1
26,809.7
Eastern Region
Peninsular Malaysia
3-7
Source : NPP Population, Housing & Social Amenities Technical Report, 2001
Plan Context
Negeri Sembilan
Economic Performance
i.
The positive and negative impacts of globalisation upon Malaysias economy are clearly
reflected in the countrys GDP for the years 1990 to 2000. As Figure 3.2 illustrates the
country has enjoyed an average annual growth rate of 7.0%, with a high of 9.5% for the
period 1990-1995 dropping to 4.7% for 1996-2000 due, in part, to the international
monetary crisis.
For the period 2000 to 2020, at a national level the government projects an average
annual growth rate of 7.0% per annum. The basis of this growth (subject to a continued
relatively stable world economy) relies upon the private sectors adoption of knowledge as
a key factor in production and the continuing integration and blurring of the economic
sectors as new info technologies and knowledge workers evolve from the old production
type economy, particularly, in the services and manufacturing sectors.
900.0
9.0%
800.0
8.0%
700.0
7.0%
600.0
6.0%
500.0
5.0%
400.0
4.0%
300.0
3.0%
200.0
2.0%
100.0
1.0%
0.0
0.0%
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
2015
2020
106.0
166.6
218.6
313.4
452.7
617.3
845.3
Peninsular
MalaysiaGDP (RM bil)
88.4
138.1
174.6
251.8
364.9
500.0
685.0
4.8%
7.5%
6.1%
7.7%
6.5%
6.5%
82.9
79.9
80.4
80.6
81.0
81.0
18.5
20.6
22.6
24.7
26.8
9,438
12,223
16,005
20,243
25,560
AARG (%)
Share of Peninsular Malaysia
GDP to total GDP (%)
Note:
83.4
AAGR
RM Billion
(1987 prices)
3.2.2
Plan Context
(1) Malaysia GDP 1990 & 1995 extracted from Malaysia Economic Statistics Time Series 2000
(2) Malaysia GDP 2000 extracted from 8MP, Table 2-6, p 35
(3) Population 2000 extracted from Population Distribution and Basic Demographic Characteristics, Census 2000
3-8
ii.
Plan Context
The contributions to GDP by regions and states illustrated in Figure 3.3 and Table 3.4
show significant differences that can substantially be attributed to the economic history of
the country and its topographical character.
Table 3.4: GDP by States, 20012020
State GDP RM million in 1987 Prices
State / Region
2000
2005
2010
2015
20012005
20012010
20012020
Perlis
1,362
1,940
2,648
3,600
4,900
7.3
6.9
6.6
Kedah
9,087
13,041
18,944
26,900
38,200
7.5
7.6
7.4
Pulau Pinang
17,314
24,904
36,446
49,500
66,300
7.5
7.7
6.9
Perak
17,153
24,371
34,235
47,000
64,600
7.3
7.2
6.8
Northern Region
44,916
64,256
92,273
127,000
174,000
7.4
7.5
7.0
Selangor
44,708
64,743
93,878
127,400
172,900
7.7
7.7
7.0
WP Kuala Lumpur
25,968
37,272
53,101
72,300
97,700
7.5
7.4
6.8
Negeri Sembilan
6,776
9,562
13,720
18,900
25,800
7.1
7.3
6.9
Melaka
6,148
8,743
12,536
16,900
22,900
7.3
7.4
6.8
Central Region
83,600
120,320
173,235
235,500
319,300
7.5
7.6
6.9
Johor
23,425
33,950
49,162
67,500
91,800
7.7
7.7
7.1
Southern Region
23,425
33,950
49,162
67,500
91,800
7.7
7.7
7.1
8,250
11,917
17,034
23,300
32,700
7.6
7.5
7.1
12,746
17,937
25,149
34,100
48,900
7.1
7.0
6.9
5,061
6,987
9,615
13,200
18,800
6.7
6.6
6.8
Eastern Region
26,057
36,841
51,798
70,600
100,400
7.2
7.1
7.0
Pen. Malaysia
177,998
255,367
366,468
500,600
685,500
7.5
7.5
7.0
Pahang
Terengganu
Kelantan
Note:
GDP at 1987 prices for 2000, 2005 and 2010 are extracted from 8MP and OPP3. Beyond 2010, GDP estimates are
based on national growth targets and assumed distribution among states.
Source:
The economic significance of the Central Region which contributed 47.0% to GDP in
2000 cannot be under estimated. This needs to be compared to Northern Region, which
contributed 25.4% and the Southern Region, which added a further 13.4% for the same
year.
State contributions to GDP for both existing and projected figures exhibits even further
variations with Selangor and Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur the most significant
contributors at almost 40.0%. The relative contribution from the far northern and east
coast states by comparison is generally below 5.0% except for Terengganu at 7.0%
which has oil production as a resource.
While this relative disparity in contribution to GDP is of concern to policy planners at a
macro level, the economy operates as a unit. Measures to enhance the performance of
the east coast states thus needs to focus on their comparative advantages which are
3-9
Plan Context
land, culture and environments rather than reactive programmes for relocation and
dispersal of enterprises which would seriously affect the image of the country and the
viability of affected economic enterprises.
iii.
Over the period 1990-2000 and as projected through the 2020, while changes in the
relative contribution of the three sectors are expected, broad based economic growth is to
continue (Figure 3.3).
Figure 3.3: Sectoral GDP Contribution and Growth, 1990-2020
14.0
70
12.0
60
10.0
50
40
6.0
AAGR
RM Billion
(1987 prices)
8.0
30
4.0
20
2.0
10
0.0
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
2015
2020
25.6
18.2
14.7
11.9
6.3
4.9
27.9
31.2
35.2
37.3
37.2
37.2
37.1
46.5
50.6
50.2
50.8
54.8
56.5
58
2.4
0.8
3.1
-0.7
1.4
1.4
12.0
7.9
8.7
7.6
6.4
6.4
11.5
5.2
7.7
9.3
7.0
7.0
-2.0
The agriculture sector is experiencing the most significant changes in that its trend in
contribution to GDP is expected to continue to fall from its 1990 level of 25.6% to its 2000
level of 14.7% and to fall further to 4.9% by 2020. This structural change needs to be
managed through a variety of programmes such as consolidation of small holder lots into
3 - 10
Plan Context
more viable larger production units, agricultural extension services and social and
employment readjustment courses.
The manufacturing sector is expected to also undergo structural changes but these are
expected to be substantially limited to the firms themselves as they adjust to the
introduction of higher levels of new technology and use of information technologies.
These changes are likely to result in a shift in the character of employment categories
with an increasing demand for skilled and professional workers. Meeting the needs of this
shortfall will involve the universities and colleges as well as the creation of special skills
training institutes.
Other programmes to facilitate the enhancement of the manufacturing sector will involve
promotion of Research and Development (R&D), creation of support services, utilization
of ICT, strengthening of the industrial clusters and support of small medium enterprises
(SME).
The tertiary sector is expected to take up the shortfall from the agricultural sector by
increasing its share from a year 2000 share of 50.2% to 58.0% by 2020. The main
contributors to growth of this sector are expected to come from tourists attracted by
leisure and business opportunities offered in shopping, meetings, conventions,
exhibitions, culture, nature and eco-tourism as well as healthcare and higher education.
Other sub sectors expected to contribute to the enhancement of the sector are finance
and transport.
A wide range of programmes have already been established as reflected in sectoral
master plans such as tourism, finance and improvements to ports and shipping. Full
realization of the benefits of these programmes will require closer coordination and
integration of programmes, particularly in the tourism sector.
At the state level, considerable variations exist between relative contributions to both
state and national level of GDP. This is illustrated in Figure 3.4, state sectoral share to
GDP 2000 where the advanced states of Selangor and Wilayah Persekutuans economy
contrasts with the three east coast states.
Projected state sectoral shares through to 2020 further reflect the structural changes and
challenges for the future, particularly for Terengganu and Kelantan, where the need for
agricultural readjustment, development of products, niche market and down stream agro
product development are necessary. The tertiary sector offers these two states
considerable potential in the form of culture, beach island and nature tourism.
Development of skills centres to support these industries will be essential for the full
potential to be realized (Table 3.5).
3 - 11
Plan Context
Primary (%)
2000
Secondary (%)
2020
2000
Tertiary (%)
2020
2000
2020
Perlis
12.6
4.3
33.3
32.9
54.1
62.8
Kedah
18.3
8.1
22.5
26.2
59.2
65.7
1.0
0.3
45.5
44.5
53.5
55.2
19.9
7.9
27.3
28.2
52.8
63.9
Selangor
3.2
0.8
59.7
62.6
37.1
36.6
WP Kuala Lumpur
0.0
0.0
19.7
13.1
80.3
86.9
Negeri Sembilan
9.8
5.4
42.6
46.2
47.6
48.4
Melaka
4.4
1.5
36.4
34.9
59.2
63.6
Johor
11.9
5.0
40.7
46.5
47.4
48.5
Pahang
21.3
10.4
19.3
22.9
59.4
66.7
Terengganu
56.3
9.5
18.7
39.4
25.0
51.1
Kelantan
16.5
8.1
16.1
12.4
67.4
79.5
Pulau Pinang
Perak
Note:
(1)
The shares of economic shares to GDP by states are based on Table 1, unpublished GDP by sectors from EPU
for the period 20012010. GDP estimates are not adjusted for bank charges and import duties.
(2)
Estimates for 2011-2020 are based on trends in sectoral growth for period 2001-2010 and adjusted for implied of
sectoral development at national level.
Source: (1)
(2)
iv.
Malaysian Employment
The national labour force grew by 3.1% per annum from 7.042 million in 1990 to 9.572
million in 2000. Total employment during the corresponding periods was 6.686 million and
9.271 million respectively, an increase of 3.3% per annum. This growth in labour force
was accompanied by a small increase in the employment population ratio and a more
significant increase to 1.9 in the worker-household ratio.
As the growth pattern suggests, job creation (employment against labour force), resulted
in a reduction of the unemployment rate from 5.1% in 1990 to 3.1% in 2000 or from
356,000 to 301,300 (Table 3.6).
Table 3.6: Malaysia : Labour Force and Employment, 1990, 1995 and 2000
AAGR (%)
1990
1995
2000
7,042.0
8,254.0
9,572.5
3.23
3.00
3.12
6,686.0
7,999.2
9,271.2
3.65
3.00
3.32
Employment-Population Ratio
0.37
0.39
0.40
Workers-household Ratio
1.43
1.78
1.89
Unemployment (000)
Unemployment Rate (%)
356.0
5.1
254.8
3.1
301.3
3.1
1991-1995
1996-2000 1991-2000
3 - 13
Plan Context
In terms of employment by occupational group there was an increase in the demand for
workers who are highly skilled and educated, due to the strategic shift towards higher
value-added activities with capital intensity and the use of new technology (Table 3.7). The
fastest growing occupations were in the professional and technical, and the administrative
and managerial categories during the 1991-2000 period.
Table 3.7: Malaysia : Employment (000) by Occupational Groups,
1990, 1995 and 2000
1990
Occupational
Group
(000)
2000
2010
2020
(000)
(000)
(000)
586
8.8
1,020
11.0
1,405
11.8
2,007
13.5
Administrative &
Managerial Workers
164
2.4
389
4.2
429
3.6
639
4.3
653
9.8
1,029
11.1
1,191
10.0
1,502
10.1
Sales Workers
769
11.5
1,020
11.0
1,727
14.5
2,260
15.2
Service Workers
778
11.6
1,094
11.8
1,620
13.6
2,171
14.6
Agricultural Workers
1,846
27.6
1,678
18.1
1,846
15.5
1,636
11.0
1,891
28.3
3,041
32.8
3,692
31.0
4,654
31.3
6,686
100.0
9,271
100.0
11,910
100.0
14,870
100.0
Total
Source: 7MP and 8MP
The basis for the rapid urban growth is reflected in the reduction of agricultural workers
where for the period 1990 to 2000 it experienced a 9.5% decline in category share from
27.6% in 1990; a trend expected to continue to 2020, albeit at a slower rate where only
11.0% will be employed in this sector.
The emerging change to a knowledge economy is also reflected in the absolute and
percentage increases for professional and technical workers where a doubling of workers
per decade is expected with the percentage increase rising from 8.8% in 1990 to 13.5% in
2020. A parallel rise in service and sales workers from around 23.0% in 1990 to 30.0% in
2020 also reflects the changing base of Malaysias economy.
3.2.3
The present land use pattern is a product of the countrys physical, historical and socioeconomic environments.
3 - 14
Plan Context
Peninsular Malaysia Land Use 2001 is categorised into four major land uses:
Built-up areas
2
Agriculture
Forests
Water Bodies
437,090 ha.
3.3%
6,668,730 ha.
50.6%
5,844,890 ha.
44.4%
230,930 ha.
1.7%
100.0%
13,181,640 ha.
Notes :
ii.
Existing Land use distribution is based on the DOA Land Cover Map, 1991 (digital data). Statistical data
discussed in the various NPP Technical Reports (e.g. Global Framework and Macro Economy Technical
Report, 2001 Chapter 4.0: Primary Sector, Environmental and Natural Resources Technical Report,
2001 are based on latter publications and data from DOA and DOF respectively.
Agriculture use includes the category other uses such as vacant and grass land as identified in the
Global Framework and Macro Economy Technical Report, 2001
Inclusive of wetlands.
The overall land use pattern, particularly when the percentage of built-up areas and
agricultural areas are considered, vividly illustrates the differences between the states in
the Central Region and the states in the Northern and Eastern Region.
Superficial assessment of development status based on percentages of built-up areas
compared to agriculture land however needs to take account of the relative size of each
state and of the significant forest acreages of the three east coast states (Pahang,
Terengganu and Kelantan). This is underlined by the fact that the highland spine, which is
substantially unsuitable for development, traverses these three states. The impression of
imbalance in the land use pattern between the West Coast and the East Coast is hence a
reflection not so much of different levels of development but of different terrain conditions
(Table 3.8 and Figure 3.5)
a.
Built-up Areas
Built-up areas are defined in the NPP as areas under predominantly urban use
but comprising a variety of land uses such as residential, commercial, industrial
and institutional uses together with supporting facilities such as roads, public
utilities, open spaces, parks and vacant lands.
Existing built up areas account for only 437,090 ha. or 3.3% of total Peninsular
Malaysia, and of these, nearly 45.0% (196,249 ha.) are in the Central Region
where Kuala Lumpur, the municipalities of Selangor, Seremban and Melaka are
located.
3 - 15
Plan Context
Table 3.8:
State / Region
Built Up
Agriculture
Forest
Water
Bodies
Total
Perlis
%
8,980
2.1
11.0
61,359
0.9
75.4
10,169
0.2
12.5
921
0.4
1.1
81,429
0.6
Kedah
%
34,008
7.8
3.6
565,929
8.5
59.8
340,655
5.8
36.0
6,160
2.7
0.7
946,752
7.2
Pulau Pinang
%
29,565
6.8
28.3
45,289
0.7
43.4
24,383
0.4
23.4
5,118
2.2
4.9
104,355
0.8
Perak
%
42,954
9.8
2.0
939,797
14.1
44.8
1,004,716
17.2
47.9
109,121
47.3
5.2
2,096,588
15.9
Northern Region
%
115,507
26.4
3.6
1,612,374
24.2
49.9
1,379,923
23.6
42.7
121,320
52.5
3.8
3,229,124
24.5
Selangor
%
131,106
30.0
16.5
390,179
5.9
49.0
257,588
4.4
32.4
16,908
7.3
2.1
795,781
6.0
18,158
4.2
63.5
9,848
0.1
34.4
219
0.0
0.8
366
0.2
1.3
28,591
0.2
Negeri Sembilan
%
29,724
6.8
4.5
448,757
6.7
67.5
183,461
3.1
27.6
3,372
1.5
0.5
665,314
5.0
Melaka
%
17,261
3.9
10.4
139,194
2.1
84.1
8,596
0.1
5.2
364
0.2
0.2
165,415
1.3
196,249
44.9
11.9
987,978
14.8
59.7
449,864
7.7
27.2
21,010
9.1
1.3
1,655,101
12.6
Johor
%
65,379
15.0
3.4
1,378,695
20.7
72.3
438,686
7.5
23.0
24,933
10.8
1.3
1,907,693
14.5
Southern Region
%
65,379
15.0
3.4
1,378,695
20.7
72.3
438,686
7.5
23.0
24,933
10.8
1.3
1,907,693
14.5
Pahang
%
27,382
6.3
0.8
1,471,212
22.1
41.0
2,075,952
35.5
57.8
17,758
7.7
0.5
3,592,304
27.3
Terengganu
%
23,669
5.4
1.8
564,121
8.5
43.6
665,895
11.4
51.4
41,132
17.8
3.2
1,294,817
9.8
8,906
2.0
0.6
654,346
9.8
43.5
834,567
14.3
55.5
4,782
2.1
0.3
1,502,601
11.4
59,957
13.7
0.9
2,689,679
40.3
42.1
3,576,414
61.2
56.0
63,672
27.6
1.0
6,389,722
48.5
437,092
100.0
3.3
6,668,726
100.0
50.6
5,844,887
100.0
44.4
230,935
100.0
1.7
13,181,64
100.0
Central Region
%
Kelantan
%
Eastern Region
%
Peninsular
Malaysia
%
Source : NPP Physical Planning, Urban Centres and Hierarchy Technical Report, 2001
3 - 16
Plan Context
The most heavily built-up state is Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur with 63.5%
of its 28,591 ha in this category. Pulau Pinang is a distant second with 28.3%,
while Kelantan and Perlis, at the other end of the spectrum have only 2.0% and
2.1% respectively classed as built-up.
b.
Agriculture
Existing agricultural areas, which include areas under crop as well as cleared
land, grassed land, unused/vacant land, account for some 6.7 million ha.
Department of Agriculture statistics indicate that a total of 4.3 million ha. were
under agricultural cultivation in the year 1999.
Included in the agriculture land use category are the 8 designated strategic
granary areas:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
IADP Kemasin-Semerak
Forest
The forest category comprises forests and wetlands and covers approximately
5.9 million ha. or approximately 44.4% of total land area in Peninsular Malaysia.
It is made up of 4.85 million ha. of Permanent Forest Estate (PFE), 0.77 million
ha. Protected Areas (0.1 million ha. within PFE), and 0.39 million ha. state land
forest. The PFE which accounts for 82.0% of the total forest cover is mainly made
3 - 18
Plan Context
up of inland forest (4.5 million ha.), peat swamp forest and mangrove forest
(278,900 ha.) and plantation forest (74,400 ha.).
The relatively large size of the three east coast states is reflected in the acreages
under forest and wetlands. These three states account for 3.5m Ha or 61.0% of
all forest land area alone. On the West Coast only Perak has significant acreages
under forestry with over 1.0 million Ha or 47.9%.
d.
Water Bodies
Water bodies, which includes the area occupied by major rivers, reservoirs and
ponds, account for about 1.7% of Peninsular Malaysia. This category includes exmining ponds which are strongly represented in Perak.
The relatively small areas ascribed to water bodies for Melaka (0.2%), Negeri
Sembilan (1.5%), Perlis (0.4%) and Kedah (2.7%) reflect the findings of technical
studies that these states are likely to be subject to water stress.
Selangor and Pulau Pinang have also been identified as falling into this same
category. The areas ascribed to water bodies at 7.3% and 4.3% of the two states
area respectively, is a minuscule 16,908 ha. and 4,448 ha. compared to the
42,915 ha. for Perak and 38,952 ha. for Terengganu.
iii.
The current settlement patterns are a product of the countrys past and present economic
regime where the various modes of production determines the geographical spread of
activities and hence of people.
With the passage of time, changes in the political settings, in consumer preferences,
lifestyle and technology result in new and evolving economic circumstances. These
changes lead to changes in the centres of production and hence in settlement patterns.
Such changes take place slowly because of inertia due to social factors, a general
reluctance of people to adjust and of the desire for full recovery of the costs of
infrastructure and other heavy investments.
The emergence of a new economic regime does not necessarily wipe out the settlement
pattern generated by a previous regime but in some circumstances modifies and builds
upon it. Changes in the economic regime can however occur very rapidly, a process likely
to be enhanced with the rapid spread and adoption of technology. This process has and
is likely to continue to impact upon the present settlement pattern in Peninsular Malaysia.
The present pattern for the Peninsula includes a dominant zone of relatively welldeveloped cities and towns, plantations and commercial farms along the West Coast from
the foothills of the central range to the coast. The larger cities and towns are mainly
engaged in manufacturing and the provision of services. The smaller towns provide retail
3 - 19
Plan Context
3 - 20
iv.
Plan Context
Conurbation
Population
Population
2000 (000)
2020 (000)
Additional
Population
(000)
% Share of
Total 2020
Urban
Population
National Growth
Conurbation
Kuala Lumpur
4,815.4
8,457.7
3,642.3
51.7
Regional Growth
Conurbations
George Town
1,266.8
2,424.5
1,157.7
14.8
Johor Bahru
1,013.0
1,836.6
823.6
11.2
317.0
637.9
320.9
3.9
7,412.2
13,356.7
5,944.5
81.6
Kuantan
Sub-total Main
Conurbations
Intermediate
(Connective) Growth
Conurbations
Ipoh
608.1
1,085.7
477.6
6.6
Melaka
395.5
667.0
271.5
4.1
Urban Growth
Centres / Future
Conurbations
Kota Bharu
269.9
418.9
149.0
2.6
Alor Star
252.9
385.3
132.4
2.4
Kuala Terengganu
272.5
368.8
96.3
2.2
54.4
86.1
31.7
0.5
1,853.3
3,011.8
1,158.5
18.4
Total Conurbations
9,265.5
16,368.5
7,103.0
100.0
Kangar
Source: NPP Population, Housing and Social Amenities Technical Report, 2001
a.
3 - 21
b.
Plan Context
Kuantan Conurbation
The strategic location, infrastructure and comparative advantage has
warranted the inclusion of Kuantan in the category Regional Growth
Conurbation although on size alone it functions at a lower level. It is expected
a Kuantan Conurbation extending into southern Terengganu will emerge with
a population of some 0.64 million and that it will function as a focus point for
the East Coast growth.
c.
d.
3 - 23
e.
Plan Context
Future Conurbations
Within the Peninsula context there exist a number of distinct lower order centres
which are manufacturing and service centres in their own right. These centres
cater not only to the international markets but also to local rural areas. Examples
of these well-established towns are Muar-Batu Pahat-Kluang and the emerging
centres of Temerloh-Mentakab and Sitiawan-Lumut-Manjung.
These areas have the potential to become the nucleus of the future conurbations.
v.
Conurbation Delineation
The urban growth process being substantially private sector initiated is typically
undertaken on an ad hoc basis and with non-sequential additions to the existing
developed lands. That is, new development is often scattered over an area adjacent to
existing urban areas but in discrete and relatively separate schemes. In recognition of this
process and the need to rationalize spatial planning, optimise utilization of land for
sustainable development, the NPP has identified conceptual edges to the prime urban
areas which allows for the identification of the larger functioning economic entity. These
areas, referred to as conurbations, include the core urban centre as well as adjoining
urban and rural type land areas within a catchment assessed on travel time criteria and
physical constraints.
The NPP proposes the use of several basic parameters for the purpose of delineating an
edge to a conurbation. The use of designated parameters which have been set at the
macro NPP level will guide and ensure an integrated and consistent approach in terms of
the future delineation of all conurbations within Peninsular Malaysia.
Parameters taken into consideration in the detailing of the delineation of conurbations
have been:
Committed Development.
Acceptable travelling time, door to door, for journey to work (Kuala Lumpur
conurbation - 45 minutes, Regional Conurbations and other State Capitals - 30
minutes).
However, it is presumed that the final delineation of the various conurbation boundaries
will be refined to include further parameters which are relevant at the regional, state and
local levels. As an example, the NPP distinguishes PAA which are of prime importance at
macro national level, whereas the various state level studies may identify agricultural
crops not located in a PAA which are of utmost importance to the state for conservation
and protection and hence an additional parameter must duly be incorporated in the
detailed delineation of the conurbation areas.
3 - 24
vi.
Plan Context
Towns between 10,000 and 80,000 populations are classed as small and intermediate
towns. Except for those located within the sphere of influence of the conurbations and
those exceptional groups like Temerloh-Mentakab, Lumut-Sitiawan-Manjung or the
somewhat bigger towns like Muar-Batu Pahat-Kluang, most of these towns have
languished. This is an impact of the changing structure of the Malaysian economy.
Small and intermediate towns had developed based on trade with and services to their
hinterlands, including administrative services. The hinterland economies, based on
agriculture, have not expanded. Unless such towns can industrialise as those within the
sphere of influence of the conurbations, or expand their economies based on a special
feature, their growth will remain constrained. At the same time, because of rising incomes
elsewhere, they are faced with the pressure of out-migration of the younger population.
The result is generally a population decline, although the total economies of the towns
may not decline (Table 3.10).
The process of decline is likely to be slow as the older generation of shopkeepers will
cling on to their businesses in spite of the continuous marginalisation that they face. But
their children would be unlikely to continue their businesses and are more likely to
migrate out, contributing to the flow of population to the conurbations.
On the other hand, small and intermediate towns that are located within the expansion
sphere of the conurbations are likely to be absorbed and become satellite towns or
suburbs to the main metropolis of the conurbation. They are likely to experience very
rapid population growth and dramatic changes in their employment base. In the last
decade several such towns, for example, Nilai, Rawang, Balakong, Senai, Ulu Tiram, etc.
have gone through this experience. As transportation facilities such as highways and fast
train connections from the conurbations extend further out, more small and intermediate
towns will benefit from development expansion from the urban cores.
What the small and intermediate towns face is a historical experience that similar towns in
other countries that had industrialised had faced. Artificial injection of investments into
those towns that are declining does not make for economic efficiency. Government
policies should not aim at stemming the demographic changes but in helping the small
and intermediate towns become small prosperous places. They are still needed by the
countryside even if the countryside can only sustain a limited trading population.
Entrepreneurs from these towns may provide the linkage between the urbanised
economy of the cities and the rural areas. They should be supported in their agricultural,
service and other enterprises. Educational and training programmes to help prepare the
young to migrate and integrate into the urban economy would be called for.
3 - 25
Plan Context
Population
AAGR
Population Change
Category 5
1991
2000
Yong Peng
12,235
20,257
5.76
Kulai
29,929
48,149
5.43
Senai
18,680
45,483
10.39
Ulu Tiram
22,198
49,829
9.40
Kota Tinggi
24,327
39,006
5.39
Mersing
19,055
20,094
0.59
Bukit Bakti
9,666
20,123
8.49
Tangkak
17,057
26,763
5.13
Pekan Nanas
10,002
17,182
6.20
Pontian Kecil
30,181
41,187
3.51
Labis
12,861
17,789
3.67
Segamat
41,096
56,706
3.64
Kuala Kedah
15,582
16,932
0.93
Bedong
11,158
29,669
11.48
Gurun
10,379
13,191
2.70
Jitra
35,881
49,455
3.63
Kuah
10,503
20,862
7.92
Kadok
15,315
17,159
1.27
Pangkal Kalong
29,386
34,672
1.85
Peringat
18,352
20,650
1.32
Pasir Mas
15,374
17,092
1.18
Tanah Merah
21,825
24,803
1.43
Tumpat
11,882
11,646
- 0.22
Wakaf Bharu
14,408
16,997
1.85
Gua Musang
14,448
16,597
1.55
Kuala Krai
19,914
19,531
- 0.22
Ayer Keroh
16,984
27,739
5.60
Bukit Baru
42,323
47,747
1.35
Klabang
22,939
30,536
3.25
Kuala Pilah
17,787
18,040
0.16
Port Dickson
47,892
69,175
4.17
Tampin
15,271
22,131
4.21
Bahau
16,649
24,314
4.30
JOHOR
KEDAH
KELANTAN
MELAKA
NEGERI SEMBILAN
3 - 26
Urban Centre
Plan Context
Population
AAGR
Population Change
Category 5
1991
2000
Bentong
31,243
51,504
5.71
Jerantut
15,811
24,737
5.10
Kuala Lipis
11,480
13,501
1.82
Raub
21,298
31,669
4.51
Mentakab
21,575
32,413
4.63
Temerloh
13,335
36,508
11.84
Bidor
18,208
24,247
3.23
Tanjong Malim
11,427
14,909
3.00
Tapah
13,750
21,295
4.98
Ayer Tawar
10,351
15,730
4.76
Kampong Koh
17,691
27,213
4.90
Lumut
22,234
31,882
4.09
Pantai Remis
10,714
13,420
2.53
Sitiawan
27,281
44,651
5.63
Batu Gajah
19,008
34,038
6.69
Kampar
23,281
19,795
- 1.79
15,886
17,536
1.10
Bagan Serai
12,395
16,703
3.37
Parit Buntar
7,475
23,368
13.50
Kuala Kangsar
31,806
34,690
0.97
33,677
34,486
0.26
Teluk Intan
62,329
60,615
- 0.31
48,838
54,390
1.20
Perai
56,401
55,860
- 0.11
Pematang Kuching
22,887
24,087
0.57
Nibong Tebal
20,856
30,365
4.26
Val Dor
18,347
15,683
- 1.73
Tanjong Bungah
16,344
15,683
- 0.46
Tanjong Tokong
25,450
23,183
- 1.03
19,822
39,598
7.99
Rawang
24,505
65,769
11.59
41,699
79,711
7.46
Banting
25,796
48,240
7.20
Jenjarom
11,614
18,245
5.15
PAHANG
PERAK
PERLIS
Kangar
PULAU PINANG
SELANGOR
3 - 27
Plan Context
Population
Urban Centre
AAGR
Population Change
Category 5
1991
2000
Kuala Selangor
16,283
33,816
8.46
Sungai Besar
14,805
20,663
3.77
Semenyih
15,075
45,088
12.95
11,972
17,763
4.48
Dungun
41,282
68,701
5.82
Cukai
43,775
62,875
4.11
Kerteh
12,954
18,285
3.90
Marang
14,522
17,387
2.02
7,679,147
12,122,090
5.20
14,131,723
17,470,092
2.50
TERENGGANU
Source: DOS, Population and Housing Census of Malaysia 2000, Preliminary Count Report for Urban and Rural Areas.
5
vii.
There are, however, some small and intermediate towns, or even towns which have not
reached the urban centre threshold of 10,000 populations that enjoy a special feature that
could be a basis for economic growth (Table 3.11). However, the limits of development
based on such special features must be recognised to avoid waste of resources.
viii.
At the very lowest level of centres would be the Rural Growth Centres (RGC). These are
central villages that could conveniently serve a rural hinterland of several villages.
However, in the process of urbanisation and rural out-migration many of the villages and
hamlets are likely to become depopulated and no longer economic to be serviced
properly. It may become necessary to consolidate the rural population at the RGCs,
which will also make it possible for the services provided to be enhanced. Incidentally
rural services such as in education and health should be re-examined to match them with
the emergent rural population structure.
3 - 28
Plan Context
Centre
Bukit Kayu Hitam
Padang Besar
Border Town
Rantau Panjang
Pengkalan Kubur
Bukit Bunga
Pengkalan Hulu
Port Dickson
Mersing
Bandar Cukai
Kuah
Tanah Rata
Tourism Towns
Frasers Hill
Raub
Kuala Lipis
Gua Musang
Jerantut
Maran
Muadzam Shah
Kuala Rompin
Putrajaya
Kertih
Cyberjaya
Temerloh-Mentakab
Kuala Lipis
Gua Musang
Lumut-Sitiawan-Manjung
3 - 29
CHAPTER 4
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
NATIONAL PHYSICAL PLAN
Development Strategy
CHAPTER 4
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
4.1
ii.
iii.
iv.
To secure spatial and environmental quality and diversity for a high quality of life.
Simultaneously, the formulation of the NPP must take cognisance of the processes
affecting the global economy and the nations prospects for economic development. At
the global level two particular processes have been observed that are having a
substantial impact not only on the composition of world trade patterns but also on the
pattern of land use of the knowledge type economies.
The first of these processes is globalisation where, at a city level, the factors of
significance are the breaking down of trade barriers and the increasing global reach of
large corporations.
The second process has been referred to as the emergence of the k-economy, a feature
of the post-industrial revolution. This process involves a shift from manufacturing and
goods handling towards employment in and production of services and the generation of
knowledge as an economic product together with the use of knowledge to enhance
economic productivity. Nascent elements of this shift are already evident in the Malaysian
economy. It is hence possible as well as critical for Malaysia to be able to attract
international investments in these emergent sectors to ensure that the country not only
achieves the objectives of Vision 2020 but also maintain a competitive position in the
post-2020 period.
The new global trend creates a new worldwide calculus of lowest cost and highest return
locations. Preferred locations must offer efficient infrastructure and good access to
international communications and transport as well as other support services and
facilities. An integral feature of the k-economy is its dependence on knowledge workers,
4-1
Development Strategy
either locally produced or attracted to a location by job opportunities and the overall
environment. Knowledge workers are characterised by their mobility as they are
supported by their relative affluence, their level of education and their cosmopolitan
adaptability. The criterion of attractiveness of a location to them, after the availability of
the knowledge-based employment itself, is the quality of life that the location can offer to
them and their families. Planning for the k-economy must, therefore, take cognisance of
not only what attracts investors but also what attracts knowledge workers.
A result of these two processes that have been observed at the international scale is the
emergence of what may be referred to as new urban hierarchies consisting of advanced
cities that offer higher order services. Below these cities are developing cities within
which manufacturing still represents the economic base.
A common character of the advanced cities is the increase in agglomeration of higher
order services activities not only in a fewer number of centres but also into even more
centralised locations. This process of increasing concentration involves information
handling services activities such as business and finance, command and control
functions, including international corporate headquarters, tourism including both leisure
and business, and creative and cultural industries as well as specialised services which
include advanced healthcare, higher education and research and development. At the
international level, the leading global cities include London, New York and Tokyo. These
are followed by a much larger group servicing specific locations or catchments such as
Sydney for the western Pacific Rim, Milan for fashion and Los Angeles for media. At the
regional level, Malaysia, represented by Kuala Lumpur, is competing against Singapore
and to a lesser extent Bangkok to be the leading advanced city for the region.
Some of the qualities essential to attract knowledge workers and that are, therefore,
supportive of the higher level services activities, include quality housing, international
quality education for children, international quality health services for families, high-end
shopping as well as recreational and sports clubs. There is also a need for a generally
cosmopolitan living environment offering safe and vibrant living conditions, variety and
tolerance in cultural activities and expressions, a wide choice in entertainment and
cuisine, and a cosmopolitan life style. All of these qualities are already available in the
three main metropolises of the country and particularly in Kuala Lumpur.
These assets should be utilised more aggressively in attracting international investors to
the country. It would be injudicious to attempt to steer investors to less developed
locations, unless, for reasons of their own, such sites are specifically requested for. Nor
would it be wise to divert financial resources to build up the infrastructure in small isolated
towns and cities and less developed regions, since the facilities in the main metropolises
have yet to be fully exploited and it would take perhaps many years to accumulate the
features in the isolated cities and towns before they become attractive to international
investors and knowledge workers. The NPP, therefore, proposes a basic development
strategy of Selective Concentration, focussing on the three main conurbations of Kuala
Lumpur, George Town and Johor Bahru as the vehicles for propelling Malaysia towards
the aspirations of Vision 2020 and into the era of k-economy.
4-2
4.2
Development Strategy
Urbanisation
In the last several decades since independence Malaysia has been experiencing
accelerating urbanisation as a result of the structural economic change from dependence
on mining and plantation agriculture to manufacturing and services. There has, however,
not only been rapid urbanisation but also, in the census decade 1991-2000, a less
obvious but highly significant trend in urban development. This is the centripetal
concentration of the urban population in a small number of city regions, namely the
conurbations around Kuala Lumpur, George Town and Johor Bahru. Indeed, the main
concentration is in the Kuala Lumpur conurbation, with George Town and Johor Bahru
struggling to keep pace. Johor Bahru has the advantage of proximity to Singapore and
can benefit from overspill development from Singapore. George Town has a long tradition
of cosmopolitan urban services to its regional sphere of influence and maintains its
position as the second city of the Peninsula (having lost its first position to Kuala Lumpur
soon after the selection of Kuala Lumpur as the national capital).
The changing world economy superimposes its effects on individual industrialising
countries, and these effects are felt particularly in the pattern of urban centres. While the
accelerated pace of urbanisation may be driven by internal forces, the concentration of
productive investments and population into a small number of city regions is as much a
response to external forces, with the necessity to direct international trade,
communications and exchange of information, movement of people, and so on, into
concentrated channels and points of contact and commerce with the wider world.
It may appear logical to expect that only one large centre would have emerged in a small
country like Peninsular Malaysia while other centres would have declined. However,
Malaysia is fortunate in that a strong urban hierarchy had already been developed over
many years in the colonial and post-colonial eras and this hierarchy, with strong local
groups of entrepreneurs, continues to provide a sustainable geographical base for further
industrialisation and economic modernisation. A pattern of polycentric interdependent
urban centres has emerged with the Kuala Lumpur conurbation being the advanced city
supported by the George Town and Johor Bahru conurbations (Figure 4.1).
Nevertheless, there is early indication that the Kuala Lumpur conurbation is growing
faster than either the George Town or the Johor Bahru conurbation and the emergence of
a single overwhelming primate city is not off the cards. Pre-emptive action should be
taken to forestall such further concentration of population and productive capacity into
one single super conurbation. Among the strategies proposed by the NPP is a fast rail
system connecting the main cities. This will provide the quick and easy connection of the
peripheral conurbations to the core conurbation and reduce the centripetal pressure to
locate businesses in the core conurbation.
The NPP recognises these trends are part of the international processes associated with
globalisation and transformation into the k-economy. These processes, in combination
with efficiency assessments, suggest that the present trend for urban development to
concentrate in the larger centres at the expense of rural areas and the smaller urban
settlements will continue. At a macro economic level, given the present stage of economic
4-3
Development Strategy
growth enhanced economic performance will also continue to require that development
generally be focused on core centres rather than be spread thinly over a broad but
relatively underdeveloped economic landscape.
For the NPP, enhanced performance of the economy, particularly with respect to
attracting foreign direct investment, suggests the need for a pattern of continuing
concentration of urban development in selected centres. The challenge for the national
and lower level planning authorities is to manage this urban growth, both in the fast
growing conurbations as well as in the slow growing or even declining urban areas, to
create urban centres offering residents a high quality of life, access to community support
such as schools, colleges, hospitals and parks as well as services, good quality urban
transport and utilities.
Urban centres outside of the three major conurbations are anticipated to grow more
slowly and, over time, lose their share of the urban population. The capability of state
capitals to service their surrounding populations should, however be supported. A special
case should also be made of Kuantan. Although clearly not in the same league as
George Town and Johor Bahru, it should be selected for infrastructural support on a par
with the other two conurbations. Focusing on Kuantan as an exception is a development
strategy for regional balance by making it possible to create a substantial centre on the
East Coast as a base for an economic spread effect.
Many small and intermediate towns, except for those lying within the sphere of influence
of the conurbations, are likely to decline in population. For lower tier authority planners
this should be seen as a challenge to enhance productivity and efficiency of the small and
intermediate towns and create small prosperous places rather than be unduly
overwhelmed by population loss. There are, however, a number of small and intermediate
towns that have shown indications of becoming the nucleus of future conurbations. These
include Mentakab-Temerloh, Lumut-Sitiawan-Manjung and Muar-Batu Pahat-Kluang.
There is also a number of small centres that possess special features that may provide a
basis for the development of niche activities.
Selective concentration remains the basic strategy for the NPP. Within the conurbations,
presently festering and emergent urban issues will be encountered. With the rapid
expansion and spread of the conurbations an ad hoc non sequential development
resulting in high infrastructure costs, loss of recreational space and green lungs, as well
as inner city decay, are some of the imminent threats. The NPP proposes counter
measures to anticipate these threats. Nevertheless, the imagination and diligence of
lower tier planners and city administrators will be fully challenged.
4-5
4.3
Development Strategy
Regional Balance
Notwithstanding addressing the issue of the countrys need for global competitiveness,
the NPP must also address the issue of regional imbalance. This should be carried out
while avoiding internal competition as well as be realistic and capable of success.
Regional balance is, therefore, interpreted as equal access to equitable levels of real
income and personal development opportunities and not necessarily as equal opportunity
to the same forms of development. Land and natural resources of the less developed
regions, which still remain not fully utilised, should be further used to increase the
productivity of these regions and, therefore, help to reduce regional imbalances.
Resource-based
4.4
Rural Development
The Department of Statistics definition of an urban area is a threshold of 10,000
populations, below which settlements are considered to be rural. At present, settlements
generally regarded to be rural based could be broadly categorised as traditional villages
or new villages, Orang Asli settlements and FELDA settlements. The settlements are
presently nested within the category of land identified as agriculture.
Some 1,189 traditional and new villages are identified likely to remain rural within the plan
period as they do not fall within the sphere of influence of existing urban centres (IP 7). Of
these villages, 771 traditional villages are located within PAA, thus indicating the
continuing importance of agricultural sector activities for the rural population affected. This
4-6
Development Strategy
manufacturing,
craft-based
industries,
value-added
downstream
4-7
Development Strategy
4.5
4.5.1
4.5.2
Agriculture Land
The National Agriculture Policy (NAP3) seeks to enhance the performance of the rural
sector through optimal use of resources and proposes to reduce the cost of food imports.
Among the measures incorporated into the NPP to fulfil these requirements is the
designation of PAA. The intent of the process is to delineate the PAA via a multiplayer
ranking sieve to identify, conserve and protect those agricultural areas of high productivity
value and to direct urban encroachment to areas of lower agricultural productivity value.
4-8
Development Strategy
ii.
iii.
Paddy
Oil Palm
Rank 1 & 2
Agriculture
under Soil
Class 1 & 2
Total
Perlis
28,314
9.1
21,645
1.1
49,959
Kedah
113,231
36.3
5,436
0.5
179,102
9.3
297,769
Pulau Pinang
14,154
4.5
4,584
0.4
10,527
0.5
29,265
Perak
48,359
15.5
63,923
6.1
339,907
17.6
452,189
204,058
65.4
73,943
7.1
551,181
28.5
829,182
21,311
6.8
115,815
11.1
115,748
6.0
252,874
WP Kuala Lumpur
1,408
0.1
705
0.0
2,113
Negeri Sembilan
69,787
6.7
186,269
9.6
256,056
Melaka
14,748
1.4
65,988
3.4
80,736
21,311
6.8
201,758
19.3
368,710
19.1
591,779
Johor
329,894
31.5
461,127
23.9
791,021
Southern Region
329,894
31.5
461,127
23.9
791,021
Pahang
1,950
0.6
382,457
36.5
290,920
15.1
675,327
Terengganu
9,552
3.1
58,464
5.6
128,917
6.7
196,933
Kelantan
75,041
24.1
704
0.1
129,862
6.7
205,607
Eastern Region
86,543
27.8
441,625
42.2
549,699
28.5
1,077,867
311,912
100.0
1,047,220
100.0
1,930,717
100.0
3,289,849
Northern Region
Selangor
Central Region
Peninsular Malaysia
Source: NPP Physical Planning, Urban Centres and Hierarchy Technical Report, 2001
The agricultural lands represent the largest single use category in the Peninsula with palm
oil and rubber plantations being the most significant activity. Sectoral studies indicate that
at the macro level, no additional lands need be made available for this use. All projected
increases in productivity are to be achieved through enhanced production technologies
and utilisation of the substantial areas of under utilised and vacant rural lands.
At the micro level however significant changes are expected as farmers respond to
opportunities offered by access to the larger and increasing affluent urban population, of
import substitution, particularly of food products and as they engage in the niche market
export of tropical products such as fruits and flowers. Malaysian farmers will also seek to
utilise its comparative advantage as a secure Muslim country to promote Halal products
to the Muslim world.
4-9
Development Strategy
The output of this analysis based on the approach that PAA should be conserved as part
of the countrys need to be relatively self sufficient in food production and that the
agriculture sector should be an efficient user of land is the generalised location of PAA
(IP 4). Studies at state and local levels should further refine the delineation of these
areas.
4.5.3
ESA Rank 2:
All other forests, wildlife corridors, buffer zones around ESA Rank 1
areas and areas with contours between 300-1000 metres a.m.s.l.
ESA Rank 3:
All marine park islands, buffer zones around ESA Rank 2 areas,
catchment areas for water intakes, areas for groundwater extraction (well
fields), areas with erosion risk greater than 150 ton/ha./year, areas
experiencing critical or significant coastal erosion and areas between
150-300 metres a.m.s.l.
4 - 10
Development Strategy
At the macro level no requirement exists for lands to be excised from forest category for
alternative uses. As mentioned, agricultural expansion will be based on increased
productivity and crop changes on the existing acreage: urban expansion will utilised the
least productive agriculture lands. Conserving forests lands would be integral to
optimising the use of land in the country. Indeed the multifunctional role of the forest
lands should be enhanced through the recognition of the central forest spine and
programmes to create linkages and corridors to the more isolated reserves (IP 9). These
corridors could include mono culture crops but would exclude housing and similar
activities.
4.5.4
Urban Land
i.
Requirements
In assessing the land required for urban purposes two factors were considered, viz. the
demand for land generated by the increase in urban population and secondly an
assessment of lands that could be made available for urban uses without jeopardizing the
integrity of key land uses considered essential as food supply, agricultural production
purposes or which are subject to environmental constraints.
The assessment of demand was based on a number of assumptions, the most significant
among these being that overall the typical pattern of development in Peninsular Malaysia
will not change significantly. However, in line with NPP objectives to achieve higher levels
of land use efficiency, better use of infrastructure, in particular public transport and to
create a higher quality urban environment with more parks and recreation areas, the
present overall gross urban density of approximately 29 persons per hectare will need to
decrease slightly to 25 persons per hectare. This target gross urban density has been
adopted to establish a macro level assessment of the need to provide urban land.
For the individual states, this figure will need to be adjusted to account for the
development characteristics of each area. The present overall gross density of Kuala
Lumpur is for example higher than 25 persons per hectare. At the Kuala Lumpur
conurbation level however, 25 persons per hectare is an applicable average even though
individual components of the conurbation, such as Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur
have been developed at higher densities.
For the year 2000, Peninsular Malaysias urban population of 12.12 million is
accommodated on built-up lands which have been assessed at 437,090 hectares.
Accounting for the increase in urban population to the year 2020, a further 331,520
hectares of land will be required for urban uses. This results in a total commitment for
urban land in 2020 of some 768,610 hectares; an area equivalent to approximately 5.8%
of Peninsular Malaysias land area (Table 4.2 and Figure 4.2).
4 - 11
Development Strategy
Table 4.2: Urban Land Required Between 2000 and 2020 and Land Available
Not Subject to Development Limitations
State/region
Perlis
1,800
840
- 960
Kedah
28,560
18,152
- 10,408
Pulau Pinang
25,080
20,499
- 4,581
Perak
26,760
133,530
+ 106,770
Northern Region
82,200
173,021
+ 90,821
111,720
13,884
- 97,836
WP Kuala Lumpur
19,600
5,123
- 14,477
Negeri Sembilan
10,040
22,989
+ 12,949
Melaka
10,760
36,397
+ 25,637
152,120
78,393
- 73,727
Johor
52,080
135,976
+ 83,896
Southern Region
52,080
135,976
+ 83,896
Pahang
17,720
113,000
+ 95,280
9,960
55,207
+ 45,247
Kelantan
17,440
18,456
+ 1,016
Eastern Region
45,120
186,663
+ 141,543
331,520
574,053
+ 242,533
Selangor
Central Region
Terengganu
Peninsular Malaysia
Note: Derived from projected urban growth and a gross density of 25 persons per hectare
ii.
Supply
A land supply analysis shows that by excluding lands identified as built-up, PAA, ESA,
some 574,053 ha. are available for a variety of uses.
Land classified as built-up, PAA, ESA are referred to as land having pre-existing
limitations. Lands not recognised as being subject to pre-existing limitations are classified
as available for development purposes. The purposes may include urban uses,
agriculture and any other uses.
The analysis suggests that at a macro level the needs of future urban land use can be
accommodated without the need to intrude into lands subject to use limitations such as
PAA or ESA. However, redevelopment of existing built-up areas and the use of brownfield
sites within built-up areas may, indeed should, be conducted.
Applying the same rigorous criteria at state level however shows that five states viz.,
Perlis, Kedah, Pulau Pinang, Selangor and Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur will need
to utilise either land designated as PAA or ESA (Table 4.2).
4 - 12
Development Strategy
Given the type and level of constraints applicable to ESA lands, this suggests that apart
from the use of PAA lands, only selected parts of ESA Rank 3 land may potentially be
considered for urban uses. Considerable care in land use planning however will be
required, particularly in the use of water catchments and water recharge areas.
For Perlis, Kedah and Pulau Pinang given the significance of the granary areas and the
enormous investment in the irrigation schemes, use of the lower ranked ESA land may
need to be considered ahead of use of the PAA lands to overcome the apparent short fall
in land required for future urban use.
Analysis of land required for future urban use and lands not subject to limitations, that is
lands not classified as PAA or ESA Rank 1, 2 or 3, for Selangor and Wilayah Persekutuan
Kuala Lumpur shows that even if some of the lowest rank ESA lands were assigned for
urban use, potentially there is still a need to utilise PAA lands for urban uses. Given the
present pattern of urban land use development within these states, in the interests of
efficiency and effective use of national resources, priority should be given to urban land
use consolidation over use of PAA.
Factors which will however militate against the loss of PAA lands and use of ESA Rank 3
lands in these two areas will include adoption of generally higher gross densities in the
main conurbation areas, use of vacant lands within the present built-up areas as well as
rehabilitation and redevelopment of existing buildings sites. Specific development plans
for Kuala Lumpur Conurbation should consider in greater detail which areas should be
consolidated as well as the provision of green corridors as part of the need to conserve
and protect the PAA and ESA.
iii.
Housing
An assessment of present and projected needs for housing up to 2020 shows it can be
accommodated within the designated urban centres without the need for conversion of
forest lands to housing nor the use of the most environmentally sensitive lands.
The major challenge in spatial planning terms is to initiate a mind set change from the
present perception that all lands adjacent to urban areas are ripe for development. The
NPP has recognised that considerable waste of resources can (and has) occurred when
land has been prepared either through conversion and layout plan approval but without a
thorough assessment of demand. As the urban areas expand this process of increasing
supply versus maturing of demand will be exacerbated. Management and dissemination
of information on supply and demand for urban purposes, land suitability, incorporation of
PAA and forest lands in conurbations into green belts are to be adopted to avoid property
overhangs and inefficient use of lands adjacent to urban areas.
Identification of routes, recognizing the long lead times and need for operational
efficiencies required by public transport should also be assessed in the managed release
of future urban land particularly in the urban conurbations. The assessment also needs to
consider the capacity and cost of upgrading of existing infrastructure and utilities such as
4 - 14
Development Strategy
water supply and delivery of electricity and road space in the sitting of future urban
growth.
iv.
Industry
While the past twenty years saw a substantial change in the type and performance of the
industrial sector, expectations of the future are of consolidation, changes in operational
characteristics, increasing niche marketing and creation of brand names.
The macro level assessment of industrial land showed no additional land is required for
this use. As inter and intra industry adjustments however take place, a demand for sites
with specific locational advantages may need creation of new sites. As most of these
adjustments will be in and around the major urban conurbations provision for these
changes has been accommodated within the overall allocations of urban land.
Industry in the past has been seen as an impetus for growth in rural areas, particularly as
a means to address regional economic imbalances. This has resulted in large areas being
assigned to the use in the East Coast. Use of the lands will need to be re-evaluated.
The Industrial Master Plan cluster concept of industrial development using broad based
criteria such as source of inputs, markets, cost of transport, access to labour, skills,
capacity and reliability of infrastructure and other support services will be considered in
the selection of industry type and sitting of clusters. Special efforts are however to be
made to promote down stream linkages of rural area production centres to assist
development in those area.
4.5.5
Tourism
In terms of spatial planning of tourism, the whole country is a destination and not just
selected locations or sites of special interest. The appeal for the tourist is the total scene;
the land and how it is used, the people, the culture. The attractions, which draw the
tourists, are only an expression of the total ethos of the country.
Malaysias development status, location and multi-cultural composition, allow for
numerous experiences while the mountains, forests, islands and beaches are all
destinations in their own right.
An assessment of Peninsular Malaysias tourism assets was undertaken which ranked
sites in terms of potential and importance. The sites selected hence represent an
expression of Malaysias history, culture, natural environment, as well as its shopping,
recreation and entertainment potential.
The 8MP forecasts that tourist arrivals to Malaysia will grow at an average annual rate of
9.0 percent per annum. Assuming that this trend is maintained during the plan period, it is
estimated that tourist arrival in Peninsular Malaysia will be approximately 36.0 million by
2020.
4 - 15
Development Strategy
Priority should also be placed on tourism activities, and the NPP listing is as follows:
ii.
a.
International shopping for ASEAN region and other international visitors the main conurbations of western coast area
b.
Health or media tourism for western coast and eastern coast areas.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
There are several towns that are strategically located i.e. within close vicinity of tourist
attraction areas. For example Taiping is located close to the Matang Mangrove Forest
Reserve and the Bubu Forest Reserve, which can function as a nature based tourism
town, while Padang Besar, Bukit Kayu Hitam and Rantau Panjang are border towns
which can be further developed as gateway towns. Their potentials as Tourism Towns
should be exploited and their economic activities oriented accordingly. Conflicting
activities e.g. polluting and heavy industries should be discouraged within designated
Tourism Towns.
4 - 16
iii.
Development Strategy
One of the recommendations of the NPP is the designation of Special Tourism Zones for
future tourism planning purposes.
Future development within designated Special Tourism Zones will need to be monitored
to ensure the long term protection of existing and potential tourist attraction areas as
national assets. Of particular importance is the need to restrict the establishment of heavy
and polluting industries within Environmentally Sensitive Areas located within the Special
Tourism Zones to ensure that there is no negative impact on environmental quality. Within
such areas, future urban and industrial developments are to be focused within existing
urban centres and industrial areas.
Among the growth sectors, tourism offers good potential to off set regional economic
imbalances between the West Coast and the central highlands and East Coast. Eco and
nature tourism, the beaches and culture of the East Coast are assets to be developed
and enhanced through close cooperation between the public and private sectors,
enhanced infrastructure information and the delivering of quality services to visitors.
A range of urban based tourism products are to be developed. Among these are health
services particularly catering for ASEAN visitors, education services which utilise the
countrys multi lingual character and proficiency in English as well as offering shopping as
part of the utilisation of facilities available for meetings and exhibitions building upon its
good quality hotels and myriad tourism attractions.
4.5.6
ICT Development
The National Information Technology Agenda (NITA) is a strategic framework for IT
programme development at federal, state and local government levels. It is intended to
draw in the participation of the private and non-government sectors as well as the
community at large. The thrust of NITA is seen as a triangle in which infrastructure,
software applications and people are inextricably linked. The goal is to create a
stimulating working and living environment that provides all Malaysians with equal access
to information and knowledge.
While the Multimedia Super Corridor (MSC) located within the Kuala Lumpur conurbation
serves as a catalyst to expand IT-related industries and to provide an enabling
environment for the orderly development of IT industry in the country, other IT centres will
include George Town conurbation and Johor Bahru in its linkages to Singapore. Contrary
to popular opinion trends in the use of ICT has to encourage further agglomeration of
activities rather than be dispersed. This is primarily due to the need for sophisticated back
up services which would not be available in more remote locations.
Within the context of the NPP, the national and regional growth conurbations of Kuala
Lumpur, George Town, Johor Bahru and Kuantan are to be developed as intelligent cities.
4 - 17
Development Strategy
The programme shall then entail all capital cities within the country to form a nationwide
network of intelligent cities linked to the global information highway.
4.5.7
Infrastructure
A characteristic of the all modern developed centres is the quality of the supporting
infrastructure and the quality of life afforded to residents through housing, education,
recreation and health facilities.
To this end, the NPP recognises that for the country to operate as an integrated unit and
to allow for balanced development, the provision of high quality infrastructure and
services is critical.
i.
Water
The most fundamental of these services is the provision of water to meet the varying
demands of the urban population, agriculture and industry. The National Water
Resources Study up to 2050 (NWRS) has estimated the demand for domestic, industrial
3
and irrigation in Peninsular Malaysia to increase from 10,833 million m /year of water in
3
2000 to 13,900 million m /year in 2020, an increase of some 22.0% (Table 4.3).
Table 4.3: Projected Water Demands for Peninsular Malaysia, 2020
Demand Sector
Domestic
Industrial
Sub Total
Irrigation
Total
Units
Year
2010
2020
million m3/yr
2,987
3,862
Mld
8,184
10,582
million m3/yr
2,592
3,561
Mld
7,101
9,756
5,578
7,423
15,285
20,338
6,517
6,517
17,857
17,857
12,095
13,940
33,142
38,195
million
m3/yr
Mld
million
m3/yr
Mld
million
m3/yr
Mld
The per capita water availability for Peninsular Malaysia in 2050 is projected to decrease
3
to approximately 3,000 m /year. It is projected that Negeri Sembilan will face severe
shortage by 2010; Pulau Pinang and Melaka by year 2020. Selangor and Perlis will be in
the same category by 2050. The water-rich states are Perak, Johor, Pahang, Terengganu
and Kelantan.
Consideration has thus been given to the protection of water sources and to the future
water needs of both the urban and rural areas. Water surplus and water stressed areas
4 - 18
Development Strategy
have been identified and these have been matched against water source catchments,
dams, and water recharge and aquifer areas (IP 14).
Apart from the water transfer programmes other specific proposals for water management
include the designation of 38 dam sites and the protection and rehabilitation of existing
rivers and water bodies through the use of buffer zones and conservation of wetlands,
peat areas and lakes (inclusive of ex-mining ponds).
ii.
Transportation Network
Network Configuration
b.
c.
a.
Network Configuration
The road and rail networks are to be appropriately linked to facilitate multimodalism and
to achieve an integrated national transportation system.
Based upon efficiency criteria, a 300 kph high-speed rail system is proposed to
consist essentially of a West Coast line, an East Coast line and two cross lines
spanning and linking together the two coastal spines.
The high-speed rail system is proposed as a bulk mover both for people and for
goods servicing all existing conurbations and state capitals. It should also connect
all the major gateways and ports (seaports, inland ports and airports) in the country.
As the high-speed train proposals along the West Coast, to the East Coast and the
east-west links have a long term horizon, corridor alignments need to identified and
incorporated into lower tier plan to be protected as part of the staged
implementation of these programmes.
4 - 19
Development Strategy
Road Network
The most important gateway for overseas arrivals to the country is the Kuala
Lumpur International Airport (KLIA).
With an annual throughput of 14.7 million passengers per annum (mppa), KLIA is
operating currently at about 60.0% of its existing capacity of 25 mppa. KLIA has an
expandable ultimate capacity of some 50 mppa. Given the availability of some
40.0% spare capacity, the most urgent task is for KLIA to create a critical mass
which is large enough to become self-generating.
Externally, KLIA is strategically situated midway of the air routes from Europe,
Middle East and Indian Sub-Continent (at the north) to the Australasia and Oceania
countries (at the south), and is equally strategic for travel from the East Asian
countries (China, Japan, Korea and Taiwan) to the South African Continent.
Strategic alliances with airlines plying these routes may accentuate its role and
appeal as a hub.
KLIA must be made into an integrated national transportation hub whereby
travellers bound for external destinations generated locally within its natural
hinterland can be channelled efficiently and multimodally through KLIA (IP 13).
KL Sentral
KL Sentral shall be the national transportation hub linking the major transportation
nodes in the country with a range of multimodal services. Being the central station,
KL Sentral shall be the confluent point of the nations high-speed rail system and
the meeting point of the Express Rail Link, the KTM Commuter Line, the Light Rail
Transit and the KL Monorail.
To be a truly effective urban transportation interchange, KL Sentral must be well
served by an efficient feeder bus system and be integrated with a well-designed
network for non-motorised transport modes such as walking and cycling.
4 - 20
c.
Development Strategy
Airports
Four international airports are proposed to be in operation to support the overall NPP
development strategy (IP 13).
Sea Ports
Existing sea ports and designated functions are as below (IP 13)
National Ports
Port Klang,
Port of Tanjung Pelepas
Regional Ports
Port Klang and Port of Tanjung Pelepas (PTP) are to be the major national ports, albeit
each with a different focus.
Port Klang, with its central location and proximity to the nations domestic hinterland, is to
be established as the national hinterland port with extensive intermodalism and efficient
landbridging services to other ASEAN countries such as Singapore, Thailand, Cambodia,
Myanmar and Laos. PTP on the other hand, is to concentrate on its development to be a
regional transhipment hub for South-East Asia with an extensive maritime feeder services
to all ASEAN countries.
The maritime service by two national ports should further be complemented and
strengthened by Pulau Pinang Port and Kuantan-Kemaman Port. Main shipping lines,
which prefer to load and unload their goods directly at the Northern Region of the
Peninsula could be catered for by Pulau Pinang Port. Similarly, Kuantan-Kemaman Port
could cater for those who wish to ship directly to the Eastern Region of the Peninsula and
for those shipping lines from the Pacific Rim countries that do not navigate en route past
the Straits of Melaka.
4 - 21
Development Strategy
The development of an efficient and extensive intermodalism and feeder and hub port
system in freight transportation should be rigorously promoted. The setting up of a
National Commission on Intermodal Transportation (NATCIT) or equivalent to help to
move the intermodal development in the country to a globally competitive level is
therefore needed. This will certainly improve the competitive edge of the two national
ports in their endeavours to become the leading top ports in the South-East Asian region.
Electricity
The peak demand for electricity supply is expected to increase threefold by 2020 due to
increases in demand by domestic, commercial, industrial users. The projected demand
and supply scenario up to 2020 is shown in the Table 4.4.
4 - 22
Development Strategy
Table 4.4: Installed Capacity, Peak Demand and Reserve Margin, 2000 - 2020
Year
2000
12,479
9,712
28.5
2005
20,819
15,380
35.4
2010
25,854
19,887
30.0
2015
32,997
25,382
30.0
2020
42,113
32,395
30.0
To meet this demand additional power plants are proposed to be located at the periphery
of the main conurbations of Kuala Lumpur, Johor Bahru, George Town and Kuantan.
In order to reduce use of fossil fuels, utilisation of Renewable Energy (RE) solution and
Energy Efficiency (EE) will be pursued. The target is to achieve use of RE from the
present 0.5% to 5.0% of generation mix by 2005. As for EE the target is to improve use
by about 10.0%, which will result in a savings of RM1.0 billion by 2005.
The steady growth in demand will require the transmission and distribution of electricity
being strengthened to improve the adequacy and reliability of supply. Among the
committed transmission projects are the 500kv line from Gurun-Air Tawar in the north,
Pasir Gudang-Yong Peng in the south and the connection from Manjung Power Station to
Air Tawar main sub-station. It is proposed that the 500kv line be extended to the Kuantan
Conurbation which is designated as one of four Regional Conurbations for Peninsular
Malaysia.
The link to Thailand will also be upgraded with high voltage direct current transmission for
transfer capability of 300MW upgradable to 600MW. This will pave the way for the
establishment of the ASEAN Power Grid. Besides Singapore, grid connections to
Indonesia should also be pursued.
ii.
Telecommunication
Internet and wireless technologies represent two of the fastest developing technologies in
the telecommunications field. A backbone network such as the one covering the MSCs
386 route km high speed broadband fibre optic cable linking Kuala Lumpur City Centre
(KLCC), Putrajaya, Cyberjaya and KLIA have been completed.
An extensive fibre optic network of 62,600 km has been installed linking states and major
towns across the country enabling high capacity broadband transmission capable of
carrying data, audio and video. With the four satellite gateways at Kuantan, Labuan,
Melaka and Semantan (Kuching), connections to countries around the Indian and Pacific
Oceans are available. The migration to third generation (3G) mobile communications
technology will free up internet access without limitations to physical constraints.
4 - 23
Development Strategy
Drainage
Under the NPP development strategy, drainage and flood mitigation programmes for the
period up to 2020 are to address flood problems for the main conurbation areas of Kuala
Lumpur, George Town, Johor Bahru and Kuantan.
Traditional flood mitigation approaches shall be integrated with source control measures
based on Manual Saliran Mesra Alam (MASMA). Flood risk maps for Peninsular Malaysia
are to be prepared to ensure that adequate provision and consideration is given to this
aspect for future physical and land use planning exercises. To this end, contemporary
approaches in flood mitigation based on preventive measures which centre on avoidance
of flood prone areas for development are to apply. An exception can be allowed for
agricultural activities, for which a suitable risk must be factored in for flooding. The
principle is to curb intrusion of urban uses into wetlands and flood plain areas that serve
as natural flood storage facilities. This environment friendly policy promotes conservation
of wetlands and their flora and fauna as well as provides regional level recreation facilities
for urban residents.
iv.
Sewerage
In line with the need to create world class cities, a major commitment to sewerage
treatment will be required. The 13 sewerage projects comprising ten sewerage treatment
plants and three central sludge treatment facilities will increase service totals to 14.4
million people.
For the Peninsula as a whole, target proposals are to have 85.0% of the population of the
49 larger local authorities, provided with centralised sewerage systems, with the
remainder relying on septic tanks.
Of the 95 smaller local authorities, 30.0% of the population are to be provided with
centralised sewerage systems, with the rest using septic tanks.
The level of service of sewerage facilities will need to be upgraded with priority given to
densely populated areas within the main conurbations of Kuala Lumpur, George Town,
Johor Bahru and Kuantan. Priority will also be given to the offshore islands and
Environmentally Sensitive Areas such as marine parks and nature reserves.
4 - 24
4.5.9
Development Strategy
Public Universities
Public Hospitals
4.6
OPP3 target that 40% of the population at the age of 17-23 years to receive tertiary education by the end of the plan.
For age cohort 17-23 years, from year 2010 onwards, targets are assumed to rise at constant rate of 5.0% every 5 year.
4 - 25
Development Strategy
The spatial expression of the concept over the three distinct geographic spaces of
Western Coast Area, Eastern Coast Area and Central Highlands are as follows:
4.6.1
To anticipate and respond to the continued urban growth of the three main
conurbations of Kuala Lumpur, Johor Bahru and George Town.
ii.
iii.
To facilitate the emergence of Kuala Lumpur, Johor Bahru and George Town and
major urban centres providing niche market, local, regional and international
tourism services, shopping, healthcare and education.
iv.
4.6.2
To recognise the uniqueness of the East Coast in terms of potential for nature,
cultural beach and island tourism.
ii.
To focus on the growth potential of Kuantan for industry and the services sector to
create a significant East Coast growth node.
iii.
To facilitate the emergence of Kota Bharu as a growth pole for the modern
economy via a growth triangle involving Pulau Pinang, South Thailand and
Kelantan.
iv.
For industrial development to focus on existing urban centres using the existing
resource base as the catalyst for growth and development.
v.
4.6.3
Central Highlands
i.
ii.
To promote the integration of the forest reserves in the Central Highlands into a
continuous forest spine.
4 - 26
iii.
Development Strategy
To create and enhance the economic base of the tourism sector through eco and
agro tourism serviced by enterprises in selected strategically located rural urban
settlements such as Cameron Highlands.
iv.
v.
For future urban development in the Central Highlands to focus on existing urban
centres to enhance the multiplier effects of services of larger urban centres on the
surrounding rural areas.
4 - 27
CHAPTER 5
POLICIES
NATIONAL PHYSICAL PLAN
Policies
CHAPTER 5
POLICIES
A primary concern of the NPP is to ensure that Malaysia is globally competitive for investments in
manufacturing and services, in particular in the sub-sectors of electronics, knowledge and
communications technology, bio-technology, education and health tourism, and related subsectors. In order to do so it shall support, promote, and enhance the infrastructure and general
development of those regions of the country that have the highest potential in attracting such
investments and are in the best position to provide the competitive edge over similar regions in
neighbouring countries. The NPP shall adopt a development strategy of selective concentration.
The NPP shall simultaneously promote and support the development of resource-based,
agriculture-based and craft-and-culture-based industries and services, such as forestry and
timber products manufacturing, traditional artisan crafts and manufactures, agricultural
downstream activities, eco-tourism and general tourism, and cross-border trade and cross-border
linked development, in those regions where such resources and opportunities are located. It shall
also promote the development of the rural areas in general through support and enhancement of
high value food production and commercial agriculture.
The NPP shall, therefore, provide a spatial planning strategy for international competitiveness and
a framework for national developmental cohesion and discipline. The spatial framework avoids
internal attrition and waste arising from internecine rivalry and provides a basis for inter-state cooperation and mutual support. Without prejudice to global competitiveness, the NPP shall
simultaneously promote co-operation among Malaysias close neighbours.
The federal government shall implement the NPP through its control of development budgeting.
The policies and measures formulated and enunciated here shall provide the guidelines for the
implementation of the NPP. While the NPP is, inter alia, an exercise in national discipline,
provision for debate, discussion and consensus is ensured in its process of formulation and in the
five-year reviews. Within the agreed framework of the NPP, local initiative is encouraged.
The main users of the NPP are expected to be the Federal and State agencies responsible for
planning, development and financial allocations as well as local agencies responsible for
development control and land administration. However, all other agencies are expected to study
and elaborate the implications of the NPP on their particular sectors, such as on education, public
health and so on. Private sector property developers will also find the firm and agreed projections
of population distribution as well as the transparent disclosure of forward distribution of public
investments in infrastructure reliable guides for their investments. This will avoid speculative
development in the private sector and future mismatch between property development and
demand.
5-1
5.1
Policies
Development Plans (Structure Plans and Local Plans) and sectoral plans and
policies shall conform to the provisions of the NPP.
ii.
For uniformity of measurement, Development Plans shall apply the standards and
criteria of the NPP, such as in:
a. Land Use Classification
b. Criteria for Land Availability Assessment
iii.
iv.
Population targets as provided in the NPP (as shown in the table) shall, within a
stipulated variation range (+/- 5%), be adhered to as the basis for the preparation
of Structure Plans, the planning of public infrastructure and social facilities, as
well as for the approval of private development applications.
v.
The NPP shall provide the spatial framework for the formulation of the FYMP.
5-2
Policies
250,000
Kedah
2,363,900
Pulau Pinang
1,940,300
Perak
2,720,200
Selangor
6,981,500
Wilayah Persekutuan
1,868,600
Negeri Sembilan
1,110,400
Melaka
904,300
Johor
4,042,200
Pahang
1,731,300
Terengganu
1,147,700
Kelantan
1,749,300
Peninsular Malaysia
5.2
Population
26,809,700
Policies
The NPP has adopted a concept of selective concentration. By this concept it is expected
the main conurbations of Kuala Lumpur, George Town, Johor Bahru and Kuantan will be
the primary recipient areas for foreign and local investments not only in the established
sectors of manufacturing and services but also in the emergent sectors of ICT, privatised
health, educational services and non-resort tourism.
The concept however recognises that where local or foreign investment is able, or
desires, to locate away from the main conurbations, optimal use of existing physical and
social infrastructure shall be promoted by focusing commitments on selected urban
centres such as state capitals and urban growth areas such as Temerloh-Mentakab,
Lumut-Sitiawan-Manjung, Kluang, Batu Pahat and Muar. To achieve a more balanced
distribution, however, Kuantan is expected to emerge as the prime economic urban
centre in the East Coast.
In summary, a finer interpretation of selective concentration is the expectation that the
main conurbations are to be the prime centres of growth, but where sustainable
development can be located away from those areas, it is to focus on only selected
centres rather than be thinly and ineffectively dispersed over a broad economic
landscape.
Simultaneously rural incomes are expected to rise through improved productivity forced
upon the agricultural sector by the competition for labour. Rising productivity in the rural
areas has to be associated with the restructuring of rural enterprise units and the use of
new and improved technology. Continued urbanisation is seen as a necessary condition
for increasing productivity in the rural areas as it provides the markets for agricultural
products and, more importantly, stimulates specialisation of agricultural activities among
regions in the country. The agricultural sector is expected to be more land-efficient
through the intensive use of suitable agricultural land and the adoption of high-level
technology.
The concentration of high value-added economic activities in urban areas also provides
the basis for specialisation and increased productivity in the tertiary sector and in
manufacturing. The urban centres provide concentrated markets for output and the link
with the global market through which technological know-how is also disseminated and
absorbed. Within the urban centres, the driving force is expected to be the tertiary sector
which is targeted to grow at 8.0% per annum over the next 20 years. Tourism and
related activities including the distributive trade and the financial sectors will be the major
forces of growth in the future. The emergence of knowledge centres within the
conurbations will support and encourage the extensive use of ICT and R&D in all sectors.
While the manufacturing sector has stabilised and matured, its continued growth and
expansion will be through use of new technologies and the strengthening of the
technological base of the industries. This change in structure and operations will be
accompanied by a shift to knowledge-based production with increasing reliance on ICT
5-5
Policies
and internally generated research and product development. Industries that rely upon
relatively unskilled labour as a key component in operations will be subject to increasing
competition from other emerging developing countries that will result in a rationalisation
of operations and location. Provision of industrial land will need to take into account
linkages, access to ICT and other support services.
The NPP supports and complements the cluster concept put forward by the Industrial
Master Plan by translating the industrial clusters spatially across the country, indicating
locations for key industrial clusters in the West and East Coasts based on their spatial
strengths. The adoption of the cluster concept in industrial development encourages
synergies, specialisation and exploitation of comparative advantages in the use of
physical resources such as infrastructure in the form of access to ports, airports, the rail
network and highways as well as non-physical resources in the form of capital, human
resources and knowledge.
Competitiveness can also be enhanced through international regional cooperation. On
its own, a nation may not have the means to meet the onslaught of global and economic
liberalisation but a grouping of nations may be able to exploit these challenges to benefit
its members. Malaysia is among such nations that have realised the significance of
participating in regional cooperation. Membership in ASEAN has been taken further into
the formation of a regional trade bloc ASEAN Free Trade Agreement - and into the
creation of regional growth triangles. The growth triangles the Indonesia-MalaysiaSingapore Triangle (IMS-GT) and the Indonesia-Malaysia-Thailand Triangle (IMT-GT)
exploit the advantages of interregional cooperation and facilitate the flow of benefits from
regional cooperation to participating states. Johor and the states in northern Peninsular
Malaysia stand to benefit the most from these growth triangles.
Among the many requirements to be economically competitive and resilient is efficiency
in the use of national resources. Land is an important national asset and its efficient use
through careful and effective planning is crucial towards enhancing national
competitiveness in the global arena. Hence, land use planning should be based on an
integrated approach throughout the country. This would not only reduce duplication and
waste of resources but would also provide an avenue to reduce regional inequalities
within the country. Inter-state cooperation in land and resource management is vital for
sustainable socio-economic development.
In Peninsular Malaysia, imbalances in economic growth exist between the West and East
Coasts. Within the West Coast, imbalances also occur between the more developed
states, especially in the northern region where states like Kedah and Perlis are relatively
less developed compared to Pulau Pinang and Perak. Reducing these imbalances is
important towards enabling Malaysia to achieve national integration. Managing and
planning the use of land resources in the less developed states forms an integral part of
the NPP because it would enhance the sustainable development of scarce resources in
these states whilst contributing to the reduction of imbalances in the medium to long
term.
5-6
Policies
NPP 2
The planning of urban-based economic activities shall adopt the concept of
Selective Concentration for strategic urban centres for all states.
IP 2 : Selective Concentration Development Strategy
Measures:
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
Locate knowledge-based activities and cyber cities in the main conurbations and
other selected urban growth centres in line with the criteria set by the Multimedia
Super Corridor (MSC) Implementation Council.
vi.
NPP 3
Cooperation in physical planning between Malaysia and its ASEAN neighbours
shall be strengthened.
Measures:
i.
Exploit the opportunities presented by the Growth Triangles, namely IMT-GT and
IMS-GT, to further generate development in the northern and southern parts of
Peninsular Malaysia.
ii.
Policies
Encourage
interstate
cooperation to
effectively
exploit
their
respective
comparative advantages and optimise the use of their infrastructure, land and
human resources.
iv.
Establish Special Economic Zones (SEZ) in participating states to cater for new
areas of regional co-operation such as halal-food processing.
v.
vi.
vii.
The country will also look at exporting professional services and forge
cooperation in physical planning with ASEAN countries and national planning
institutes of member countries
NPP 4
Land and natural resources of the less developed regions shall be used in a
sustainable manner to increase the productivity of these regions and reduce
regional imbalances.
Measures:
i.
b.
Areas with strong nature tourism potential, particularly in the Eastern Coast
Area, shall be conserved and promoted.
ii.
iii.
Strengthen
the
provision
of
educational
technical
training
and
social
Policies
NPP 5
Planning for industrial land development shall adopt the concept of Industrial
Cluster.
IP 3 : Industrial Centres and Potential Industrial Clusters
Measures:
i.
b.
c.
ii.
Proposal for new industrial estates outside of the main conurbations and selected
growth centres must be supported by a detailed programme identifying actual
occupants, activities, linkages and viability studies.
iii.
iv.
v.
5.3
Modernising Agriculture
Agricultural acreage is expected to decline over time as urban uses compete with
agricultural uses. The high costs of labour and land have also made the country less
competitive in agricultural products compared to neighbouring countries. Despite these
constraints, the agricultural sector remains important and can be enhanced to contribute
still further to the national economy. Agricultural activities also continue to be dominant in
employment in the East Coast and the northern states on the West Coast.
5 - 10
Policies
The Third National Agricultural Policy (NAP3) has specifically emphasised the
maximisation of income through optimal use of resources. This entails raising productivity
and sustaining growth. Another goal of the NAP3 is enhancing food security. To achieve
its goals, the NAP3 advocates that the granary areas be designated as permanent paddy
producing areas, that oil palm cultivation be sustained through improved productivity, and
that synergistic links between forestry and wood-based industry be fostered.
In supporting the NAP3, there is a need to develop a rational land use strategy that seeks
a compromise between the need for agricultural land and the increasing demands of a
rapidly urbanising economy that focuses on urban-based activities. Due cognisance must
be taken of the strategic position of the granary areas as the main food producing areas
in the country. Consideration should also be given to the importance and dominance of
oil palm cultivation and the need to rationalise the conversion of large estates to urban
uses. Long-term prospects for rubber cultivation even on a small-scale appear uncertain
and weak, thus demanding a review of land allocated for rubber cultivation in order to
avoid penalising specifically the current rubber smallholders as well as the country as a
whole.
NPP 6
The support of agriculture shall take cognisance of the threats and opportunities
of urbanisation.
IP 4 : Prime Agricultural Areas
Measures:
i.
ii.
All PAA outside of designated urban areas shall not be permitted for
conversion to urban uses. Only conversion from one crop to another or
from agriculture to agro-tourism and forest plantations may be permitted.
b.
All PAA within the designated conurbations that fall within green belts shall
be permanently conserved. Only conversion from one crop to another or to
livestock raising and aquaculture shall be permitted.
c.
A national exercise shall be carried out to identify, designate and map the
PAA.
d.
All Development Plans shall incorporate the areas of PAA onto their
coverage.
5 - 12
iii.
Policies
iv.
v.
Existing major food production areas such as vegetable farms, tea plantations,
livestock and aquaculture areas shall be conserved to support the national food
programme.
vi.
The change of crops in areas that are strategically located close to major urban
centres to food and cash crop cultivation shall be encouraged.
NPP 7
The eight (8) strategic granary areas comprising Muda (MADA), Kemubu (KADA),
IADP Kerian-Sungai Manik, IADP Barat Laut Selangor, IADP Pulau Pinang, IADP
Seberang Perak, IADP Terengganu Utara (KETARA) and IADP Kemasin-Semerak
shall be conserved.
Measures:
i.
Permanent development limits for all urban centres within these areas shall be
established.
ii.
There shall be no conversion of paddy land in these areas to urban or any other
uses beyond the established urban limits except for paddy related activities.
iii.
In the Structure Plans for states with granary areas, urban development shall be
diverted from these areas and alternative locations for urban development shall
be identified.
iv.
Water catchments for the granary areas shall be identified and conserved to
ensure adequate and quality water supply for paddy cultivation.
v.
Fiscal measures shall be introduced to assist states that are required to conserve
granary areas.
5.4
5 - 14
Policies
Tourism is seen as the main driver of growth within this sector. Tourist arrivals are
targeted to grow at an average rate of 7.5% and the aim is to attract more international
tourists to lengthen their stay in Malaysia. There is a need to diversify tourism products to
capture a larger market as well as to develop good supporting facilities to ensure that
Malaysia stays competitive in this area. Supporting facilities would include the software
of human resources and an efficient transportation system, which play key roles in
moving tourists from the entry points to other parts of the country to enable them to
maximise their stay.
Four tourism development zones have been identified by the National Tourism Policy as
the primary tourism development zones in Peninsular Malaysia. They include the Kuala
Lumpur-Melaka corridor, the Penang-Langkawi-Northwestern States, South-East Johor
and the Peninsular East Coast. Within these zones, only tourist attraction areas of
international and national importance and interest (gazetted Protected Areas and
potential Protected Areas) are highlighted in the NPP.
NPP 8
The different tourism development zones shall concentrate on different packages
of tourist products to maximise their resource and locational advantages.
IP 5 : Major Tourist Attraction Areas
Measures:
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
Infrastructure and support facilities necessary to strengthen and promote ecotourism, socio-cultural and heritage tourism in the Eastern Coast Area to a niche
market shall be developed.
5 - 15
vi.
Policies
by
international
tourists
to
enhance
competitiveness,
without
viii.
ix.
b.
c.
x.
xi.
xii.
As a new policy direction, a more attractive financial assistance for the states
that conserve their land for tourism activities, shall be worked out.
5.5
Policies
conurbations will continue to grow faster than the rest of the country and attract inmigrants. Population projection of the three main conurbations is as shown in Table 5.1.
Table 5.1: Population Projection of Main Conurbations
Conurbation
Kuala Lumpur
4.8
8.5
George Town
1.3
2.4
Johor Bahru
1.0
1.8
38.4 %
47.3%
Total as % of Peninsular
Population
The formation of a nascent fourth conurbation is also taking place around Kuantan. The
selected strategy of selective concentration based on the main conurbations will reinforce
these four conurbations.
Vision 2020 and OPP3 strategies are based on a high level of economic growth through
accelerated industrial development and an export-based manufacturing sector. The 8MP
also confirms the growing sectors of the economy as services and manufacturing. It
further identifies a need for the promotion of FDIs and recognises that industrialisation for
the future will be faced with intensifying competition among countries for investments and
markets. These challenges and the economic planning strategies formulated to meet
them imply a focus and dependence on the urban areas for the countrys future
development. They also imply a general freedom of location for investors in accordance
with the imperatives of their particular businesses, and international investors are likely to
prefer locations that not only have the physical infrastructure to support the needs of their
businesses, and that provide proximity to other businesses and industries, but also the
infrastructure to support the lifestyle of knowledge workers on whom their businesses will
depend. Such lifestyle needs include social, recreational and sports clubs, a variety of
entertainment, outlets for cultural expression, international schools for children, high-end
shops for wives, convenient access to international travel and a generally stimulating
social environment. Only the highly urbanised conurbations can provide these conditions.
The strategy of selective concentration avoids impinging on the capability of our most
dynamic urban centres to compete against other urban centres in the West Pacific region
and sustains their competitiveness. The implied outlook for Peninsular Malaysia is,
therefore, a continuing process of concentration of productive investments, employment
and population in the main conurbations.
The trend in urbanisation towards primacy of the main cities may be modified but not
countered, as past policies in rural urbanisation in the example of the Regional
Development Authority (RDA) areas, have shown. Any attempt to direct industrial
development to areas dictated by the government may not only result in ineffective public
investments but also losing the competitiveness of Malaysia in attracting FDIs or even
losing local investments to Malaysias competitors, and, therefore, jeopardising achieving
the objectives of Vision 2020. Modification of the current development trend may include
a continuing support for the development of selected and limited locations in the less
developed regions such as Kuantan and south Terengganu in order to encourage a
balance in the geographical development of the country and to strengthen the base for
5 - 18
Policies
further industrialisation of these regions. It also includes channelling overspill and excess
development to conurbations located between the main conurbations such as Ipoh,
Melaka, Temerloh-Mentakab and Lumut-Sitiawan-Manjung.
The small and intermediate cities and towns in general, including some state capitals,
have generally not developed as fast as the main conurbations and have experienced a
loss in their share of the urban population in the decade 1991-2000. Public investments
in infrastructure in order to attract development in the sectors facing global competition to
the small and intermediate cities and towns will not be cost-effective. Their
developmental viability should, therefore, depend on sectors that are not subject to global
competition, or at least less intensive global competition, such as resource-based
manufacturing, resource-based services, craft-based industries, downstream agricultural
activities, forestry, as well as the general modernisation of the agricultural sector. There
will be competition among the small and intermediate cities and towns for such forms of
development. Priority should be directed to the state capitals such as Kota Bharu, Kuala
Terengganu and Kangar, or in the case of downstream agricultural activities, to those
centres located in the midst of modernising agriculture such as Tanah Rata, Kluang,
Muar and Batu Pahat. Some of the modernising agricultural areas are of course already
catered for by the conurbations. Many small and intermediate cities and towns will,
therefore, still face stagnation and potential decline.
There are a few exceptions, particularly towns that have a potential in those sectors
related to in-situ resource development, that is, in those niche sectors which are not
subject to intensive international competition. These towns may be referred to as special
feature towns. They include towns located close to sites of outstanding natural beauty or
areas of natural, archaeological or historical attraction that can become tourist resort
towns (example: Tanah Rata and Port Dickson) and new bases for eco-tourism
(example: Raub and Kuala Lipis), as well as towns that cater to or support a particular
mining operation or a particular industry arising from mining (example: Kerteh). They also
include towns that can exploit their locations such as border towns that benefit from
cross-border trade and international developmental co-operation (example: Padang
Besar and Rantau Panjang). They further include towns that have been created for a
special purpose and which will receive exceptional public financial support (example;
Putrajaya and Cyberjaya), but this last group of towns are generally located within the
expanding conurbations and their development will be supported by the growth of the
conurbation concerned. The exceptions also include clusters of towns which, because of
their locational advantage in relation to the transportation system of the country as well
as other factors, have the potential to become the nuclei of future conurbations, namely,
the Lumut-Sitiawan-Manjung area in Perak and the Temerloh-Mentakab area in Pahang.
State Governments may direct infrastructural investments that are appropriate to the type
of development anticipated to these exceptional areas identified.
The rural areas will face population decline not only because of the pull factor of urban
employment but also because of the push factor of agricultural modernisation. It is,
therefore, important to rationalise rural settlements not only to support an expanding
urban-based economy but also to service efficiently the remaining rural population.
5 - 19
Policies
5 - 20
Policies
Within the conurbations, urban sprawl and the consequential deterioration of the urban
environment is an issue in the continuing expansion of the conurbations. While the
conurbations themselves should be encouraged to grow in order to absorb development
investments, individual cities within the conurbations should not lose form, character and
functional efficiency. Urban planning at the local level should seek to nurture a liveable
environment in the individual cities, maintain the integrity of relationships between the city
cores and suburbs and minimise travel time between centres and peripheries. The
conurbations should not become a chaotic and continuous mass of undifferentiated urban
uses, imposing upon its inhabitants journeys to work, school, shopping or play, that are
unnecessary, long, or that criss-cross one another.
The inner cores of the conurbations have also experienced a loss of their share of
population to the suburbs and satellite towns in the decade 1991-2000. The city of Kuala
Lumpur has grown at a slower rate than its conurbation and George Town has actually
lost population. The population of Kuala Lumpur City grew at 1.4% p.a. while its
conurbation grew at 5.6% p.a. not including Kuala Lumpur City itself, the conurbation in
fact grew at 7.7% p.a. The population of George Town shrank by 2.2% p.a. or 17.8%
over the inter-censual period. This is in spite of the growth of employment in the core
cities at rates that surpass their surrounding suburbs. For the year 2000 the employment
ratio of Kuala Lumpur City was 0.59 against a conurbation ratio of 0.41 and a national
ratio of 0.40 (Draft Kuala Lumpur Structure Plan 2020). This suggests that people
continue to work in the core cities but move out to live in the suburbs. There is, therefore,
increasing commuting.
The main cause of population movement out of the core cities may be attributed to the
increasing cost of city housing, making living in the cities beyond the affordability of
middle and lower income groups. Only subsidised housing in the form of low-cost
housing manages to retain a proportion of the low income groups in the cities. However,
while subsidised housing is extended to the poorest city dwellers it is not extended to the
middle-income and lower middle-income groups. A situation may be developing in which
the core cities are populated by the richest and the poorest and little in between. This is
not a desirable social mix.
As low-cost housing areas are dependent on public maintenance not only of the
infrastructure but also of the buildings themselves, they are vulnerable to dilapidation and
neglect. The contrast between rich areas and poor areas can become very visible, again
not a desirable social condition for the cities.
The out-migration of population from the inner cities may make way for the conversion of
old housing areas to commercial and office uses, but many areas are left to decay as the
rate of abandonment outpaces the rate of redevelopment. The decay of inner city areas
will become increasingly an issue over the next two decades. Urban policies need to be
put in place to guide the planning of cities, particularly the older cities in the main
conurbations. Greater effort need to be made at the local planning level to deal with the
design and renewal of specific sites and locations as well as any other impediments to
redevelopment such as land tenure issues. In the Malaysian context inner city should
not be interpreted strictly as a geographical term implying a central location but should
5 - 21
Policies
include old areas and settlements that might have been hastily built or built without
proper planning and have become parts of the cities, such as traditional villages and new
villages.
The aspiration to attain developed country status and to enjoy the quality of urban life of a
developed country involves the onus to adopt developed country standards for the
physical environment. Present planning standards, particularly standards of open space
provision, recreational parks and facilities, need to be reviewed. Standards and quality of
infrastructure provision, such as in water supply, sewerage, street and drain cleanliness
need to be monitored, reviewed and compared with international standards.
Malaysia is still experiencing a property overhang, which immobilises capital and
resources, which has come about from speculative development. Future property
overhangs should be prevented from recurring. It is incumbent on approving authorities to
be restrained in the approval of development applications and to be guided by projections
of housing and property demand based on realistic population projections. Development
applications include the application for land conversion and sub-division. Approval of land
conversion should not be at a rate faster than five years ahead of projected demand for
development land. Presently some states have approved conversions sufficient to meet
the demand for development up to twenty years ahead. In addition to the planning control
exercised by state governments and local authorities, it is important that the private
sector also exercises self discipline and responds more sensitively to state planning
projections. A contributing cause of speculative development is the lack of accurate,
regular and transparent information on the housing and property situation available to
developers and property purchasers. Exacerbated by economic recession it engenders a
property overhang.
The policies for managing human settlements should also be integrated with the sectoral
policies in agriculture, conservation of resources and the environment, and other sectors
that have an impact on land use. For example, the agricultural policy of conserving the
strategic granary areas would require that urban development be diverted from cities
located in the midst of granary areas like Alor Star. Such diversion could be areas just
outside the paddy growing lands or to other cities and towns in the state. The details of
urban diversion would be matters for state and local planning to address, but national
policies should include financial assistance to states involved with the necessity for such
urban diversion.
National policies on human settlements should also encourage local initiative where such
initiative does not contradict the national spatial framework. For example, the aspirations
of Kuala Lumpur City as contained in its Structure Plan should be supported. Support
would be translated into federal financial allocations for local programmes.
5 - 22
Policies
NPP 9
The concentration of urban growth in the conurbations shall be anticipated and
accommodated.
IP 6 : Hierarchy of Conurbations
Measures:
i.
Designation
Area
i.
i.
i.
Ipoh
ii. Melaka
Alor Setar
ii
For the National Growth Conurbation a 45 minutes travel time from the
employment centres of core cities.
b.
For all other conurbations a 30 minutes travel time from the employment
centre of the core city.
iii.
As a new urban policy direction, use of vacant land within the present built-up
area, rehabilitation and redevelopment of existing building sites shall be
emphasized.
NPP 10
The growth of the four main conurbations of Kuala Lumpur, George Town, Johor
Bahru and Kuantan shall be supported.
Measures:
i.
In addition to the general support for services and manufacturing, the global
competitiveness of the main conurbations for local and foreign direct investments
5 - 23
Policies
in the k-economy growth sectors of ICT, health and education tourism, and
biotechnology shall be given special attention and support.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
The aspiration to develop and promote Kuala Lumpur as a world class city shall
be supported.
vi.
Ipoh
b.
Melaka
c.
Temerloh-Mentakab
d.
Lumut-Sitiawan-Manjung
e.
Muar-Batu Pahat-Kluang
NPP 11
The conurbations shall be planned and developed as integrated regions.
Measures:
i.
ii.
In the case of a conurbation lying wholly within a single state the regional plan for
Local planning authorities within the conurbation area may, together and
under the supervision of the State Planning Committee, prepare a regional
plan for the conurbation;
b.
iii.
The Structure Plan may incorporate a regional plan for the conurbation.
In the case of a conurbation covering the areas of more than one state, Regional
Planning Committees shall be formed, comprising all local planning authorities
within the conurbation, representatives of the state governments involved and a
representative of the federal government.
5 - 25
iv.
Policies
Regional plans for the conurbations shall, among other things, address such
matters as new towns and growth centres within the conurbations, transportation,
water supply, sewerage systems, solid waste disposal, green belts, industrial
estates, and flood mitigation.
v.
vi.
vii.
The general population targets of the four main conurbations for the NPP plan
period (2020) are as follow:
viii.
a.
: 8.5 million
b.
: 2.4 million
c.
: 1.8 million
d.
Kuantan Conurbation
: 0.6 million
In delineating city limits, land shall be provided in between individual cities and
towns which shall be set aside from development. Such land shall form a green
belt, and, if deem necessary, legislation may be enacted to provide for the
creation, maintenance and control of green belts.
ix.
Isolated forest reserves, PAA and ESA Rank 1 and 2 shall form parts of the green
belts. Agriculture Soil Class 3 land may also be included in the green belts as
local authorities and State Governments deem fit.
x.
The development control of lands designated as PAA and ESA shall be enforced
in the green belts. Generally, development in the green belts shall be restricted to
the use of land for recreational purposes, and the suitable type of recreational
activities should depend on the type and sensitivity of the area.
xi.
State land within the urban limits shall be reserved for public use.
Sequential test refers to a sequential approach to the release of land and buildings for housing, supported by a system of
regional and sub-regional reconciliation of housing needs and demand.
5 - 26
Policies
NPP 12
The individuality and physical separation of the cities, towns and villages within
the conurbations shall be maintained.
Measures:
i.
The development limits of individual cities, towns and villages within the
conurbations shall circumscribe the horizontal expanse of the individual cities,
towns and villages.
ii.
The integrity of relationships between the core areas of individual cities and their
peripheries shall be maintained.
iii.
iv.
Structure Plans and Local Plans shall encourage infilling and the use of
brownfield sites within the urban areas, to better utilise existing and committed
physical and social infrastructure.
v.
Local planning shall create scope for urban regeneration in the core cities not
only for the purpose of economic growth but also for the purpose of enhancing
the living environment.
vi.
vii.
5 - 27
Policies
NPP 13
Towns with special features shall be identified and the development of projects
exploiting their special features shall be supported with the appropriate
infrastructure.
Measures:
i.
Town
Border Town
Tourism Town
(including eco-tourism)
Port Dickson
Mersing
Bandar Cukai
Kuah
Tanah Rata
Frasers Hill
Raub
Kuala Lipis
Gua Musang
Jerantut
Maran
Muadzam Shah
Kuala Rompin
Putrajaya
Kertih
Cyberjaya
Temerloh-Mentakab
Lumut-Sitiawan-Manjung
Kuala Lipis
Gua Musang
Public amenities and facilities in all cities, towns and villages shall be maintained
at a level commensurate with the needs of their population.
5 - 28
ii.
Policies
Private investments in resource-based industries, craft-based industries, valueadded agricultural activities, eco-tourism and similar industries and services in
cities, towns and villages around which the resources or the base activities are
located shall be supported by public investments in infrastructure necessary for
such developments.
iii.
NPP 15
The development of Rural Growth Centres (RGCs) shall be reinforced to rationalise
the servicing of the rural population.
IP 7 : Potential Rural Economic Clusters
Measures:
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
The residents of villages where the population has become too small, or which
are too isolated, to service or which, for any reason, have become uneconomic to
service, should be encouraged to relocate to RGCs.
5 - 29
Policies
NPP 16
Planning standards shall be designed to meet the requirements of a developed
country.
Measures:
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
The quality and range of municipal services provided shall also be reviewed to
commensurate with the aspirations of a developed country.
NPP 17
A designated central authority shall be charged with the responsibility to publish
on regular basis information on land use development.
Measures:
i.
The central authority shall be identified by the National Physical Planning Council.
ii.
iii.
Every district land office shall be required to supply to the designated central
authority, at regular intervals, information on land conversions approved in its
district.
iv.
5 - 31
v.
Policies
vi.
All Development Plans shall include a programme designating when land is 'ripe
for development' and conversion to urban use. Approval for the conversion of
land from agriculture to urban use shall adhere to such a programme. Where
conversion is well ahead of development there should be a moratorium on
conversion. The rate of conversion should be no more than 5 years ahead of
projected development.
5.6
Area (ha.)
% of Total Land
(est.) ~ 90
1946
10,144,808
77
1970
8,008,767
61
1999
5,938,068
45
5 - 32
Policies
At present, the remaining forests play a vital role in safeguarding our water supply,
providing forest produce and recreation and acting as a gene pool. Similarly, wetlands
are among the most threatened ecosystems and their conservation is vital for the wellbeing of the country. Wetlands play important roles in flood mitigation and recharging
groundwater storage. Conversion of wetlands to other land uses will aggravate flooding in
many parts of the country. Most of the wetland forests especially on the west coast of
Peninsular Malaysia have been developed and the remaining areas are under threat of
encroachment and over-exploitation.
Currently, the Protected Areas (PA) in Peninsular Malaysia include gazetted National and
State Parks, Wildlife Reserves / Sanctuaries, Marine Parks, Protection Forests (of the
Permanent Forest Estate, or PFE) and other areas designated for statutory protection.
This categorisation is based on the definition by the Convention on Biological Diversity
(UNEP, 1992), to which Malaysia is signatory, which is: A geographically defined area
which is designated or regulated and managed to achieve specific conservation
objectives. Another definition that has been used is one provided by the International
Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), that is: An area of land and/or
freshwater/marine body legally demarcated and dedicated to the protection, preservation
and enhancement of biological diversity and of natural and associated cultural resources
and managed through legal or other effective means (MOSTE, 1997).
Although these PA already comprise various habitats/ecosystems, the distribution of
reserves reveals that some habitats/ecosystems are seriously under-represented, namely
wetlands and lowland dipterocarp forests. Moreover, despite these PA being gazetted,
there are provisions that allow degazettement for short-term economic uses.
Uncontrolled development in the highlands is also a growing problem that requires
unambiguous policy directions. Highland in this document refers to land with elevation
above 300m as adopted in the Study for the Sustainable Development of the Highlands
of Peninsular Malaysia (EPU, 2002). The last decade has seen intensive development in
the highlands, particularly in the established hill stations for commercial agriculture and
tourism. The changes are particularly noticeable at hill stations such as Genting
Highlands, Cameron Highlands and Frasers Hill, while development in other highlands is
also fast intensifying. Many disasters such as flash floods and landslides have occurred
that may be attributed to uncontrolled development. The natural topography of highlands
is in itself extremely susceptible to soil erosion and landslides. In addition, disturbance
from land development in such steep terrain will result in siltation of rivers and streams,
thus increasing the incidence of flash floods downstream.
Policies are also needed both to protect and to manage our water resources.
Incompatible developments within water catchments lead to pollution and deteriorating
river water quality and significantly increases cost of water treatment. Besides the
hazards of flash floods and landslides, other issues include over exploitation of water
resources, land subsidence, encroachment onto floodplains and riparian buffer zones
and loss of ecological integrity.
5 - 33
Policies
The coastal zones of Peninsular Malaysia have generally been experiencing rapid
development including large-scale reclamation for tourism and urban purposes. Policies
are needed to control and guide these developments so that the potential threats to the
marine and coastal ecosystems such as alteration and loss of habitat, coastal pollution,
over exploitation and coastal erosion and deposition can be minimised and monitored.
NPP 18
Environmentally Sensitive Areas (ESA) shall be integrated in the planning and
management
of
land
use
and
natural
resources
to
ensure
sustainable
development.
IP 8 : Environmentally Sensitive Areas
Measures:
i.
b.
c.
ESA Rank 3 Controlled development where the type and intensity of the
development shall be strictly controlled depending on the nature of the
constraints.
ii.
Areas that will be inundated by proposed dams may be logged, subject to the
timing requirements of dam construction. Areas between proposed inundated
areas and the 1000m contour level within a proposed dam catchment may be
sustainably logged, subject to the conditions applicable to the appropriate ESA
ranking. An existing logging concession in a proposed dam catchment and
potential Protected Area may continue until the expiry of the concession.
iii.
There shall be adequate buffer zones between ESA and urban or agriculture
development. A minimum standard of buffer zone shall be established.
Permanent buildings should not be permitted in the buffer zone. The buffer zone
may be utilised for agro-forestry. Within the designated conurbations, ESA buffer
zones may be incorporated into the green belts.
iv.
Structure Plans and Local Plans shall refine and delineate the ESA identified in
the NPP to include other ESA that may be of importance at the state or local
levels.
5 - 34
v.
Policies
b.
c.
d.
Klang Islands (Pulau Klang, Pulau Che Mat Zain and Pulau Tengah),
Selangor
e.
f.
g.
h.
All forests above 1000m elevation except for Special Management Areas.
Further detailed studies at the Structure and Local Plan levels shall determine the
locations and sizes of all PA. All PA shall be protected from any form of urban
and agricultural development.
vii.
viii.
ix.
All present State Land Forest shall be gazetted as PFE and be subjected to
appropriate silvicultural treatment to further improve the productivity of such
forests.
x.
Future functions of the forest land shall be recommended in the context of the
proposed development strategy for each region.
xi.
Fiscal measures shall be introduced to assist states that are required to conserve
areas for environmental purposes beyond the needs of their states. This includes
Protected Areas as well as water catchments.
5 - 36
Policies
NPP 19
A Central Forest Spine (CFS) shall be established to form the backbone of the
Environmentally Sensitive Area network.
IP 9 : Central Forest Spine
Measures:
i.
The CFS shall be gazetted as a protection forest under the National Forestry Act.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
a.
b.
c.
e.
5 - 37
Policies
NPP 20
Sensitive coastal ecosystems shall be protected and used in a sustainable manner.
IP 10 : Sensitive Coastal Ecosystems
Measures:
i.
Coastal reclamation for future urban expansion shall not be carried out except for
the development of ports, marinas and jetties.
ii.
Parts of the mangroves in Larut Matang District, which are important for
West Coast fisheries, should be gazetted as protection forests.
b.
c.
d.
Turtle nesting sites such as Pulau Redang, Kuala Setiu Bahru, Geliga and
Paka in Terengganu, Pulau Upeh in Melaka and Chendor in Pahang should
be protected as turtle sanctuaries.
e.
f.
iv.
5 - 39
Policies
NPP 21
Land development in highlands shall be strictly controlled to safeguard human
safety and environmental quality.
IP 11 : Highlands And Special Management Areas
Measures:
i.
Cameron Highlands-Kinta-Lojing,
b.
c.
Frasers Hill.
Within the SMA, future agriculture development shall only be permitted in areas
o
New golf courses and industries shall not be permitted in the highlands.
The synergy between agriculture and tourism shall be strengthened to optimise
the use of resources.
iv.
NPP 22
All surface and ground water resources are strategic assets to be safeguarded and
used optimally.
IP 12 : Industrial Sites within Water Catchments
Measures:
i.
Surface and ground water resource and recharge areas shall be identified and
delineated as areas requiring special land use management and subject to
specific land use control.
ii.
All existing and future land use activities within surface and ground water
resource and recharge areas should not jeopardise nor add to the cost of water
treatment for human consumption.
iii.
New industrial development and other activities that could be a source of water
borne pollution shall not be permitted in water catchments.
5 - 41
iv.
Policies
v.
vi.
Water bodies shall be managed to protect the aquatic flora and fauna, with the
objective to sustain living rivers.
5.7
Policies
urban centres, a national high-speed rail transport system shall best serve as a
comprehensive unifying system linking all state capitals. A minimum of two east-west
cross-links (north and central) shall be considered in the development of the national
high-speed rail system. When performing at a speed of 300km/h or more, the high-speed
rail will be the most optimal and appropriate choice in terms of journey time, carrying
capacity and safety. Apart from considering the latest technologies in rail transport, the
execution of the high speed network should also include an evaluation of upgrading the
present narrow (1.0m) gauge to the internationally accepted 1.435m gauge.
Complementing the inter-state high-speed rail, the main urban conurbations should have
their own light and mass rail transit (LRT and MRT) systems for urban transit. Railway
stations will become the focal points of urban life and activity. Railway stations will
become community places in addition to being transportation interchanges.
In relation to sea traffic, Malaysia plays the role of a regional transhipment hub and its
ports also serve as regional hinterland ports. As a transhipment hub, Malaysia functions
as the transfer point for different shipping lines where cargo is off-loaded from one ship to
other ships and forwarded to different port destinations. Seaports and inland ports are
oriented essentially for the transportation of goods rather than people. The most
important objective of a port is to ensure the efficient and speedy transfer of goods from
inland transport to maritime transport and vice versa.
Port Klang and the Port of Tanjung Pelepas (PTP) should be promoted as the two major
national ports, albeit each with a different focus. Port Klang, with its central location and
proximity to the nations domestic hinterland, should ideally build on this comparative
advantage to focus on being the regional hinterland port with extensive intermodalism
and efficient land-bridging services to other ASEAN countries. PTP, given its locational
characteristic on the other hand, should concentrate its development to be a regional and
international transhipment hub for South-East Asia with extensive maritime feeder
services to all ASEAN countries.
For air traffic, strategically KLIA has the potential to be a competitive hub for air travel
between the northern hemisphere and the southern hemisphere. The strength of KLIA
lies in the fact that it has a large hinterland of some 23 million potential travellers. The key
for KLIA to unlock its latent potential is to galvanise its large hinterland together with the
country's vast potential for tourism to generate a critical mass which would entice a
greater number of airlines to operate from KLIA.
Domestically, with the introduction of the high-speed train as the trans-peninsular
transportation spine, domestic air travel will become increasingly less significant, and so
will regular, scheduled domestic air services. Tourism-related chartered services may
then assume a more significant role.
Within most urban centres, the transportation system is neither balanced nor sustainable.
In order to achieve a reasonable degree of sustainability there is a need to have a more
efficient, safe and comfortable public transport system to permit a modal shift from private
car usage. Kuala Lumpur for example, with a current modal split of about 80:20 in favour
of private transport, reflects an obvious imbalance between private and public vehicle
5 - 45
Policies
usage. Due to the existing imbalance and number of cars more road infrastructure will
need to be provided unless a shift of mode from private transport to public transport is
imposed. Hence, a modal split of 50:50 is proposed as a national strategy for all major
urban centres.
In the immediate future, road transport shall continue to provide the basic mode of travel
for the movement of people and goods. While the expressway network substantially
caters for inter-state movement in the West Coast, the older federal and state roads still
cater for substantial interstate and local movements.
This network, basically laid down some decades ago, urgently needs upgrading in terms
of road alignment, widening and village by-passes to enhance road safety and cater for
the high volumes and faster travel speeds of todays vehicles. The prime focus of this
programme should be all federal roads and main rural-urban roads that are hindering the
growth potential of rural areas capable of servicing the conurbations and rural-urban
commuters.
NPP 23
In recognition of the inter-relationship between land use and transport an
integrated national transportation network shall be established.
IP 13 : Integrated National Transportation Network
Measures:
i.
ii.
A master transportation services network plan incorporating the role and function
of road, rail, sea and air facilities and services at a national level shall be
developed.
iii.
In order to optimise use of resources, the role and function of each road shall
complement rather than duplicate each other.
iv.
v.
Corridors shown in Structure and Local Plans shall be protected from alternative
land uses.
vi.
vii.
Policies
All main public transport terminals shall be developed in each of the main urban
conurbations, state capitals and urban growth centres, as seamless multi-mode
integrated hubs catering for buses, taxis, private cars, LRT, MRT and interstate
trains.
viii.
A hierarchy of transportation systems comprising rail, road, sea and air services
to link all states economic activities in Peninsular Malaysia shall be established.
The high-speed rail shall act as the core system supported by the road network.
NPP 24
A national integrated high-speed rail system shall be established.
Measures:
i.
Corridors for the high-speed rail system shall be established and protected in a
phased programme.
ii.
All state capitals should be linked via the high-speed rail network with the rail
stations acting as focal points for community and transportation activities.
iii.
The priority route for implementation of the high-speed system shall be the Kuala
Lumpur-Johor Bahru-Singapore link, followed by the Kuala Lumpur-George Town
link and subsequently north to Bangkok, as part of the Trans-Asian Railway.
iv.
Two east-west links should be established as part of the high-speed rail network,
one from Kota Bharu to George Town and the second from Kuantan to Kuala
Lumpur.
v.
The present ERL route to KLIA would form part of the high-speed rail network.
vi.
KL Sentral shall be the national transportation hub linking the major transportation
nodes with a range of multimodal services.
NPP 25
The national road network shall be further extended for regional travel and for local
access.
Measures:
i.
The road network shall form the base layer on which the proposed high-speed rail
system shall be overlaid.
ii.
The expressway system shall be extended to cover both the West Coast and the
East Coast regions in which a minimum of three expressway cross-links should
be provided to better integrate the Western Coast Area, Central Highlands and
Eastern Coast Area.
5 - 48
iii.
Policies
NPP 26
Major airports and seaports shall be developed according to their complementary
functions to enhance the nations economic competitiveness and facilitate tourist
arrivals.
Measures:
i.
Planning and development shall support the functions and roles of the
international airports as follows:
a.
KLIA as the main international gateway and the regional hub of South-East
Asia.
b.
Bayan Lepas International Airport as the major hub serving the industrial,
commercial and tourism needs of the northern region.
c.
Mat Sirat International Airport shall complement Bayan Lepas and support
the role of Pulau Langkawi as the major site for exhibitions, conventions
and tourism.
d.
Sultan Ismail International Airport as the major hub of the southern region
and to support the function of the Port of Tanjong Pelepas.
ii.
Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah (Kuantan), Sultan Ismail Petra (Kota Bharu) and Sultan
Mahmud (Kuala Terengganu) airports are to be upgraded to facilitate arrivals of
chartered international flights.
iii.
Planning and development shall support the functions and roles of major seaports
as follows:
a.
National Ports:
b.
Policies
Regional Ports:
c.
These ports shall provide for the efficient bulk movement of goods and serve as
intermodal and multimodal hubs.
NPP 27
The Transit Oriented Development (TOD) concept shall be promoted as the basis
of urban land use planning to ensure viability of public transport.
Measures:
i.
ii.
iii.
Walkway linkages shall be provided to connect the railway stations with other major
landmarks or developments in the town centres.
iv.
For major towns, the railway station and its immediate areas shall be designated for
high-density commercial and residential development.
v.
For those cities with their own rail networks, the stations shall be designated as the
foci providing mixed-use services and activities.
vi.
The conurbations of Kuala Lumpur, George Town and Johor Bahru shall
incorporate LRT and MRT routes into the urban fabric.
vii.
The present LRT routes in the Kuala Lumpur conurbation shall be better integrated
and extended to service the new outer growth centres.
5 - 50
Policies
NPP 28
In all major urban centres, an integrated public transportation system shall be
established.
Measures:
i.
Transportation in all major urban centres shall adopt a modal split of 50:50
between public and private transport.
ii.
An integrated, regular and frequent public bus service shall be provided in all
urban settlements of population up to 0.5 million.
iii.
For urban settlements with populations of more than 0.5 million, an integrated
mass rapid transit system shall be adopted.
iv.
5.8
Policies
The present extraction rates of ground water for domestic, industrial and irrigation
purposes, particularly during the dry season in Kelantan and Selangor, warrants adoption
of water management measures to ensure that this resource is maintained at sustainable
levels and the quality of water is not subject to pollution. Currently the issues relating to
ground water resource are ground water pollution arising from uncontrolled development
within and surrounding the recharge areas, over-extraction that leads to land subsidence,
saline water intrusion particularly in coastal areas, and the lowering of ground water
tables within peat swamp areas.
Quality of life issues related to sewerage, solid waste and flood management have
suffered from a late start in the general perception of the need for these services as part
of normal health and safety requirements of citizens.
At present Malaysia is ranked at level 2 in terms of ICT on a 1 to 4 scale where 4 is high
use of ICT. In terms of national development, the provision of good ICT infrastructure is
vital for Malaysia to be a regional hub for ICT development. Emphasis will continue to be
placed on making ICT accessible and affordable to the masses through efficient
technologies. The MSC shall provide the model for the provision of a similar utility
provision and level of service for new cyber cities.
The NPP recognises these deficiencies in ICT and proposes efforts be directed to
improving the quality of services by focussing initially on the main conurbations, by
attending to shortfalls in service availability, and to enhancing and providing a more even
spread in the quality of services. Each of the service providers should establish integrated
national and specific area programme based on the spatial distribution priorities
established in the NPP.
NPP 29
The NPP shall provide the spatial framework for the efficient delivery of integrated
infrastructure services at the national and regional level and to the main
conurbations.
Measures:
i.
b.
Sewerage,
c.
Waste management,
d.
e.
f.
Telecommunication and
g.
shall adopt the NPP as the basis for planning and coordinating provision of
infrastructure services.
5 - 52
ii.
Policies
National infrastructure agencies shall oversee state and local level agencies to
ensure programmes are consistent with the intent of the NPP.
iii.
The NPP population projections and distribution proposals shall be utilised as the
basis for infrastructure service supply and distribution programmes.
iv.
v.
NPP 30
The supply and projected demand for water by quantity and location should guide
the planning of water resource areas.
IP 14 : Water Resources And Water-Stressed Areas
Measures:
i.
ii
iii.
NPP 31
Ground water resource and recharge areas shall be identified and protected from
activities that cause pollution and reduce yield.
IP 15 : Ground water Resources
Measures:
i.
Structure Plans and Local Plans shall delineate ground water resource areas
(wellheads) and recharge areas as part of the integrated land use management
plans.
5 - 53
ii.
Policies
Land use controls and buffer requirement shall be imposed to protect ground
water resources including recharge areas and wellheads.
iii
The use of public wells and important ground water resources catering for
commercial, industrial and agricultural activities shall be monitored, particularly to
avoid over-extraction.
iv
Drainage controls shall be imposed in the vicinity of important ground water areas
such as peat swamps and freshwater swamps to maintain the water table
required to sustain these ecosystems.
NPP 32
All urban settlements shall be serviced by a centralised sewerage treatment
system.
Measures:
i.
ii.
iii.
NPP 33
All urban settlements shall be serviced by an integrated network of solid-waste
disposal and/or recovery facilities.
Measures:
i.
ii.
5 - 56
iii.
Policies
The location of the facilities shall comply with national guidelines as contained in
the National Solid Waste Master Plan, taking into consideration the prevention of
any health hazard to, and adverse effect on the environment of surrounding
population.
iv.
Due to long-term health and environmental factors, disused sanitary landfill and
other contaminated sites shall not be utilised for human habitation.
v.
NPP 34
Land utilised for main drains, streams and rivers shall be designated as drainage
or river reserves.
IP 16 : Flood Prone Areas
Measures:
i.
ii.
Structure Plans and Local Plans shall incorporate adequate reserves for all main
drains and rivers.
iii.
iv.
For rural areas and areas not subject to USWM proposals but subject to flooding,
appropriate flood mitigation measures shall be adopted.
v.
To enhance the quality of urban life, the USWM retention system and riverbank
system shall be integrated to create continuous urban parkway networks.
vi.
5 - 57
Policies
NPP 35
As strategic assets, electricity generation plants and distribution mains shall be
suitably located to provide a reliable and efficient supply of power to consumers.
IP 17 : Power Supply Grid
Measures:
i.
ii.
Renewable energy such as energy from solar, wind, wave and biomass are to be
promoted to complement traditional power generation sources.
NPP 36
Appropriate ICT technology shall be provided as a priority to all settlements.
Measures:
i.
The criteria adopted by the MSC should provide a basis for content and quality of
service.
ii.
iii.
Promotion and use of ICT in all levels of government and the private sectors
should be a priority.
5 - 59
CHAPTER 6
IMPLEMENTATION MECHANISM
NATIONAL PHYSICAL PLAN
Implementation Mechanism
CHAPTER 6
IMPLEMENTATION MECHANISM
Once the NPP is approved there is a general duty on the part of all agencies of the Federal and
State Governments to ensure that its objectives are achieved. While the Director General of Town
and Country Planning (DG DTCP) is responsible for preparing the NPP, its implementation is the
responsibility of all Federal and State agencies. Agencies identified in the plan to administer the
policies are required to translate them into action plans, programmes and projects and to include
such programmes and projects in the subsequent FYMP. The DG DTCP shall monitor the
implementation of the Plan and report periodically to the National Physical Planning Council
(NPPC).
6.1
6.1.1
6.1.2
Federal Secretary
for Sabah and
Sarawak
State Secretary
Conference
Menteri Besar
Conference
National Land
Council
Constitutional Council
National
Finance Council
State Secretary
State Exco
State Ruler
Department Agencies
Ministry
Cabinet
Rulers Conference
Parliament
EPU
ICU
State Economic
Planning
Committee
SEPU
State
Development
Council
SDO
IAPG
National
Development
Planning
Committee
National Economic
Council
National
Development and
Economic Planning
National
Development
Working
Committee
National
Development
Council
Project
Implementation
and Coordination
Local Planning
Authority
State DTCP
State Planning
Committee
IAPG
FDTCP
NPP
Committee
National Physical
Planning Council
National Physical
Planning
6-2
Implementation Mechanism
ii.
iii.
All three streams of development planning have parallel functions that relate to
organisations at the Federal and State levels. What may be important is to forge
horizontal linkages particularly at the Secretariat and Technical Working Committee
levels. At a functional level it is important that DTCP is represented in the NDPC and
similarly the EPU is represented in the NPP Committee.
6.1.3
Under this
proposal there will be five inter related bodies related to National Physical Planning:i.
ii.
NPP Committee
iii.
iv.
v.
Apart from the NPPC which is provided by law the other bodies are the recommendations
of this Plan. The functions of these bodies are discussed in Section 6.1.4.
The NPP Committee is proposed to be chaired by the Secretary General of the Ministry
responsible for Town Planning and attended by relevant heads of government agencies
and departments. The Secretariat to the NPP Committee will be provided by the Federal
Department of Town Planning. It is also proposed that a National Physical Planning
Advisory Committee be set up to advice the Minister on current concerns and issues
relating to physical planning. This is similar to that practised in Denmark and Holland. The
composition of the three related committees and councils are also different. The NPPC
will be the highest physical planning council in the country and will comprise of Federal
and State Ministers. The NPP Committee will comprise mainly of related government
heads of departments while the Advisory Committee will include the NGOs, Professional
Institutes, Business Councils and special interest groups.
The main agency responsible for preparing the NPP will be the Federal Department of
Town and Country Planning. The department will issue call circulars to both Federal and
State agencies to furnish the department with information and project proposals that have
a bearing on national physical planning through the NPP Land Use Planning Intelligent
System (LaPiS).
development plan, Inter Agency Planning Groups (IAPG) will be established to prepare
and review policy papers. The IAPG may also be further reduced to smaller Technical
Working Groups (TWG) to discuss technical reports. Technical working papers should be
issue related and not compartmentalised by sectors. Some of the relevant planning issues
could include coastal areas management, sustainable highland development, role of small
towns in regional development, etc.
6-3
Implementation Mechanism
Parliament
Cabinet
Chairman : PM
Federal Ministers
National
Land
Council
State MB
Secretary : DG of Town and
Country Planning
National Council
for Local
Government
National
Finance
Council
Secretariat : FDTCP
Sector Policies
National Housing
Council
Coastal Engineering
Council
Water Resources
Council
NPP Committee
Chairman : Secretary
General for Town Planning
Environmental
Council
Deputy Chairman : DG of
Town & Country Planning
Heads of Govt. Agencies /
Depts.
Secretariat : FDTCP
National Mineral
Council
Regional Planning
Council
National Physical
Planning Agency
Research
Institute
Federal Town
and Country
Planning
Department
Spatial
Planning and
Development
Institute
Secretariat : FDTCP
IAPG
TWG
Federal
Ministries/
Agencies
State/Local
Government
State DTCP
Municipal Planning
Department
6-4
Implementation Mechanism
In addition to the NPP, the NPPC may also issue planning guidelines similar to the
Planning Policy Guidelines (United Kingdom) to the various states from time to time.
Once the Draft Plan is prepared, it is reviewed by the NPP Committee before it is
submitted to the NPPC for approval. The approved plan is further endorsed by Cabinet
before it is tabled to Parliament for information. Policies and proposals that are within the
jurisdiction of the Constitutional Councils i.e. the NLC, NCLG and the NFC may be further
tabled in the respective councils. The decisions of these constitutional councils are
generally binding on the states.
6.1.4
The NPPC is established by way of an amendment to the TCPA 1976 (A1129). The
functions of the council are:
a.
b.
To advise the Federal and State Governments on matters related to town and
country planning.
c.
To approve the Draft National Physical Plan and keep it in review from time to time.
d.
e.
f.
To advise the State Planning Committees on planning applications and plans which
are referred to the council for its advice.
g.
To give directions to the Director General of Town and Country Planning consistent
with the provisions of the Act.
h.
The Council may also perform any other functions incidental or consequential to the
Act.
6-5
Implementation Mechanism
ii.
NPP Committee
b.
Establish the broad terms of reference for the preparation and review of the NPP.
c.
Review the Draft NPP before it is tabled to the NPPC for approval
d.
e.
Review all planning policy guidelines (PPG) for approval by the NPPC.
f.
Review strategic planning applications that are referred to the NPPC for its advice
(Under S.22 (2A) TCPA).
The members of the NPP Committee are mainly heads of technical departments and
could include the following (Table 6.2):
6-6
Implementation Mechanism
Secretary General of the Ministry responsible for Town Planning as the Chairman
Director General of Town and Country Planning as the Deputy Chairman
Director General of Economic Planning Unit
Secretary General of the Ministry of Finance
Director General of the Implementation and Coordination Unit.
Director General of Land and Mines
Director General of Survey and Mapping
Director General of Public Works Department
Director General of Drainage and Irrigation
Director General of the Environmental Quality
Director General of Forestry
Director General of Agriculture
Director General of Wildlife and National Parks
Director General of Fisheries
Director General of Minerals and Geoscience
State Directors of Town and Country Planning
The Secretariat will be provided by the Federal Department of Town and Country
Planning
iii.
Advise the Minister on issues concerning town and country planning in the country.
b.
c.
The membership of the committee is by invitation and should include the following (Table
6.3):
Table 6.3: Members of the National Physical Planning Advisory Committee
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
The Secretariat will be provided by Federal Department of Town and Country Planning.
6-7
iv.
Implementation Mechanism
The National Physical Planning Agency is the Federal Department of Town and Country
Planning. Under the TCPA, the DG of Town and Country Planning is required to prepare
the NPP. This will require the existing National Physical Planning Division be
strengthened to keep the NPP in review. This will also entail increased staffing with
sufficient skills as well as enhancing the GIS capabilities of the Department.
v.
It is important that the NPP benefits from the latest R&D in spatial planning. While some
of these inputs could come from the universities, it may be necessary that the government
establishes a research institute for Spatial Planning and Development in order to have a
continuous R&D programme on national physical planning. This institute should
preferably be an autonomous self regulating research institute that is supported by
government grants. It could be modelled after ISIS with full powers to hire and fire staff. It
is common to have research institutes to support a national spatial planning programme.
Examples include KRIHS in Korea, Habitat (Nairobi), International Centre for Sustainable
Cities (Canada), International Institute for Urban Environment (Netherlands).
vi.
IAPG and TWG comprising representatives from various government agencies and
NGOs should be established prior to the preparation of the next review of the NPP. The
IAPG will accordingly frame the TOR for the next review. The review will essentially
address national spatial issues identified by the IAPG in the subsequent 5 year period.
6.1.5
Other
ii.
iii.
iv.
6-8
Implementation Mechanism
Similar to the situation in the Netherlands, it is proposed that a National Physical Planning
Advisory Committee be set up to advice the Minister on public issues concerning Town
and Country Planning in the Country (Table 6.3).
6.2
Plan Implementation
There are 36 policies and proposals identified in the NPP. These policies cover a wide
range of issues that have a bearing on the physical development of the country. The
policies of the NPP will be implemented by various Federal and State agencies
responsible for administering them .The measures suggested to implement these policies
are contained in Chapter 5. The principal implementing agencies identified to implement
these policies are shown in Table 6.4. In tandem with the FYMP and the project planning
cycle, these agencies will have to take proactive actions to translate these policies into
action plans, programmes and projects. A concerted effort will be made to ensure that
these projects are included in the subsequent FYMP. This will also require the forging of
horizontal linkages with the economic and project planning cycles (Section 6.2.1).
The proposals of the NPP will also be implemented through the respective Structure
Plans which will have to conform generally to the proposals of the NPP. As Structure
Plans are gazetted documents, they will additionally provide the statutory basis for
implementing the policies.
This is generally instituted through the following ways:
i.
While preparing the Structure Plan, the State Director of Town and Country
Planning (the Director) is required to examine the provisions of the NPP and
other national economic, social, physical, environmental and conservation
policies.
ii.
The Draft Structure Plan must contain matters prescribed by the SPC and the
NPPC. This would suggest that the NPPC may issue planning guidelines from
time to time and it would be incumbent on the States to conform to these
guidelines in the Structure Plans
iii.
In considering whether to approve the Draft Structure Plan, the SPC is required to
consult with the NPPC for its direction and advice. Should the SPC fail to reach a
decision within 6 months of its submission, the Director may refer the Draft
Structure Plan to the NPPC for a decision.
iv.
6-9
Implementation Mechanism
b.
c.
The SPC is required to refer the matter to the NPPC for its advice on the
application.
v.
The NPPC may make rules with respect to any matter in the Act. The rules made
by the Council will prevail over the rules made by the State Authority.
Table 6.4: Implementing the Policies
Policies
Principal Implementing
Agencies
Implementation Initiatives
Encourage economic
diversification especially in the
agriculture and tourism sectors as
well as bridging the digital divide
and providing technical training
and social development
programmes
6 - 10
Implementation Mechanism
Policies
Principal Implementing
Agencies
Implementation Initiatives
DOA, DTCP
A comprehensive review of
existing planning standards
should be carried out
DTCP, LPA
6 - 11
Implementation Mechanism
Policies
Principal Implementing
Agencies
Implementation Initiatives
Prepare an Integrated
Transportation Network Plan and
identify a coordinating agency
MOT, DTCP
EPU, MOT
6 - 12
Implementation Mechanism
Policies
6.2.1
Principal Implementing
Agencies
Implementation Initiatives
MEWC, MHLG,
Infrastructure agencies
and utility service
providers
Incorporate Centralised
Sewerage System Master Plans
into the LP
socio-economic
planning
and
project
planning
processes
are
well
institutionalised in the country. National socio-economic planning takes the form of the
OPP and the FYMP. The NPP on the other hand will provide the spatial component to
National Development Planning. The NPP however is a new planning activity and it is
necessary that both horizontal and vertical linkages are established with the
corresponding committees to ensure the successful implementation of the Plan.
In translating the proposals of the NPP into projects and programmes the following
actions need to be taken:
i.
Federal and State agencies should refer to the NPP and make project bids in
conformity to the recommendations of the NPP.
6 - 13
ii.
Implementation Mechanism
The NDPC and EPU should give weight to projects that are in line with the
recommendations of the NPP.
iii.
The DG of TCP should be a permanent member of the NDPC to ensure that the
aspirations of the NPP are incorporated in the subsequent National Development
Plans.
iv.
v.
The IAPG for the FYMP relating to physical planning should be chaired by the DG
of TCP.
6.2.2
Hold focus group discussions and dialogue sessions with the relevant councils
while preparing the plan.
ii.
The NPP shall take into consideration the relevant national sector policies when
the plan is prepared.
iii.
Include members of the various councils in the IAPG and TWG and have them
prepare technical working papers as inputs to the NPP.
iv.
6.2.3
6 - 14
6.3
Implementation Mechanism
Plan Monitoring
Plan monitoring provides the framework for the continuous evaluation which would
become the basis for the review of the NPP. Key development indicators would be
examined and the continuing validity of all assumptions, forecasts and objectives
checked. The following section discusses the methodology to monitor the performance of
the NPP and the implementation of NPP policies.
6.3.1
Scope of Monitoring
The scope of monitoring involves determining the various aspects of the NPP which
would need to be monitored. There are two major objectives in monitoring, namely:
i.
To monitor the application of the NPP policies through the use of relevant
indicators.
ii.
To determine the extent of conformity in land use planning between the NPP and
SP. The main aspects of land use planning to be monitored would include land
use changes pertaining to the following:a.
Sustainable urban land use patterns with special emphasis on the physical
growth of urban land and conurbations as proposed in the NPP.
b.
6.3.2
Monitoring Agencies
The DTCP as the custodian of the NPP and the State DTCP as the custodian of Structure
Plans are the lead agencies to conduct the monitoring process. The role of each agency
is defined below:
i.
The NPP Division of DTCP is the lead agency responsible for monitoring national
land use planning information and policy indicators for future reviews of the NPP.
ii.
The respective State DTCP will take the lead in maintaining its own land use
planning information and monitoring land use changes at state level.
6.3.3
6 - 15
i.
Implementation Mechanism
The key instrument that will be used to monitor the progress and
application of land use policies are the NPP policy indicators. The
indicators can be modified, removed or added to the list with each Review.
The NPP policy indicators are for Peninsular Malaysia and will be collected
on an annual basis by the NPP Division DTCP from selected data
providers. The data providers will be required to collect the requisite
information in a prescribed format and forward them to DTCP on a regular
basis. Indicators are prepared in the form of numeric and statistical
measures based on quantifiable dimensions such as area, proportion, ratio,
and indices. The usefulness of the indicators is based on their relevancy,
timeliness, ease of understanding and reliability. Table 6.5 outlines the
NPP policies, the key indicators and data providers.
Table 6.5: NPP Policies Indicators
Policies
Policy Indicators
Key land use and population indicators
of the NPP will be monitored in the SP
and LP
1.
ESA
2.
PAA
3.
4.
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
3.
1.
2.
3.
Data Providers
EPU, DTCP, LPA,
DOF, DOE,DOA,
DOS
6 - 16
Implementation Mechanism
Policies
Policy Indicators
Data Providers
MIDA, MITI, DTCP
1.
2.
1.
2.
1.
2.
1.
1.
DOS, DTCP
1.
2.
2.
3.
4.
1.
DTCP
1.
DTCP, LPA
1.
DTCP, LPA
SEDC
DOA, DTCP
6 - 17
Implementation Mechanism
Policies
Policy Indicators
Data Providers
MIDA, SMIDEC,
DTCP
1.
2.
1.
1.
DTCP
1.
DTCP
1.
2.
LPA
1.
1.
2.
1.
1.
1.
2.
1.
1.
Approved (km)
Budgeted (RM)
Built (km)
Length of expressway
6 - 18
Implementation Mechanism
Policies
Policy Indicators
EPU, MOT
1.
1.
1.
1.
2.
3.
1.
1.
1.
Sewerage Services
Dep., DTCP
1.
1.
1.
TNB
1.
Data Providers
2.
3.
Approved (Number)
Amount Budgeted (RM)
Built (Number)
6 - 19
ii.
Implementation Mechanism
b.
To ensure conformity among the different tiers of land use planning, LaPiS
will be developed within a framework of an integrated land use planning
information system which will comprise three components i.e. LaPiS, State
Land Use Intelligent System (SLaPiS) and District Land Use Intelligent
System (DLaPiS). This integrated framework will allow for effective data
and information sharing among the three levels of organisations
responsible for physical planning.
c.
6 - 20
Implementation Mechanism
Remotely sensed
data
Socio-economic
tables &
projections
INFRASTRUCTURE
DEMOGRAPHICSOCIAL
Population &
Households
Urban Settlements
Rural Settlements
Community
Facilities
Roads
Rail
Ports
Airports
Utilities
DTCP
(FEDERAL)
ECONOMIC
LAND USE
Global Trade
Macro Economy
Primary
Secondary
Tertiary
Land Cover
Built-up Area
Existing
Residential
Commercial
Industrial
Recreation Areas
Others
NPP MAIN
FINDINGS
STRATEGIES
& COMPOSITE
MAPS
Committed projects
Proposed projects
Approved projects
DTCP
(STATES)
SLaPiS
STATE LAND USE &
ZONING PLANS
COMMITTED DEVELOPMENT
DLaPiS
LOCAL
AUTHORITIES
Parcel lot level
information
Local Area
Data
Development
Projects
JUPEM
(CAMS)
DEPT. OF
AGRICULTURE
MACRES
EPU
DEPT OF
STATISTICS
GOVT. AGENCIES
related to
Tourism
Forestry
Minerals &
GeoScience
Drainage & Irrigation
Environment
Utilities
MOU
MOU
MOU
LaPiS
MOU
MOU
GOVT. AGENCIES
related to
Housing
Education
Health
Trade & Industries
Social Facilities
Transport
6 - 21
Implementation Mechanism
d.
Monitoring land use changes: This will be done from the bottom up,
that is, information on land use changes would be tracked at state level
and generalised to meet the needs of the LaPiS information system.
iii.
To achieve consistency, the land use base maps for each state are
prepared and standardised in both scale and format to facilitate comparison
of land use patterns both at the state and federal level.
The principal
source of land use maps at state level will be the DOA Mapping Division.
There is a need for DTCP to enter into an MOU with DOA, so that each
state can have access to a standardised base map. These maps will be
updated with urban land use information from the local authorities.
b.
For the purposes of tracking land use changes in the LaPiS, information
need to be compiled on approved development projects of 20 hectares and
above for smaller states such as Pulau Pinang, Perlis, Melaka and Negeri
Sembilan and 50 hectares and above for the other states. Information such
as the status of approved projects and the types of land use will also be
monitored.
c.
The schedule for updating approved development projects from the State
DTCP will be on an annual basis.
6 - 22
Implementation Mechanism
d.
The transfer of land use information from the State DTCP to LaPiS will be
in digital format to minimize errors. The LaPiS will establish guidelines for
the conversion of data to the required format.
iv.
Phase 1: 2005
DTCP has to strengthen and upgrade the GIS Units at both the Federal
and State levels in meeting staff requirements, training facilities and the
necessary software and hardware to facilitate the vertical flow of
information between the State and the Federal DTCP.
6 - 23
b.
Implementation Mechanism
Phase 2: 2006-2010
Expanding the vertical linkages to the third tier, i.e. the local planning
authorities which are the custodians of the respective District Local
Plan Information Systems.
MyGdi
Govt. Agencies
Federal Level
LaPiS
Govt. Agencies
Federal Level
Govt. Agencies
State Level
SLaPiS
Govt. Agencies
State Level
Govt. Agencies
District /Local
Level
DLaPiS
Govt. Agencies
District /Local
Level
6.4
Implementation Mechanism
Figure 6.6:
Leadtime
Leadtime
2 years
8MP
8MP
MTR
MTR
Leadtime
Leadtime
2 years
Leadtime
Leadtime
2 years
T+5
Leadtime
Leadtime
2 years
Leadtime
Leadtime
2 years
NPP
NPP
Leadtime
Leadtime
2 years
SP
SP
Leadtime
Leadtime
18 months
DLP
DLP
9MP
9MP
MTR
MTR
Leadtime
Leadtime
2 years
Leadtime
Leadtime
2 years
DLP
DLP
10MP
10MP
Leadtime
Leadtime
2 years
NPP
NPP 22
Review
Review
Review
SP
Leadtime
Leadtime
18 months
T + 10
MTR
MTR
11MP
11MP
NPP
NPP 33
Review
Review
Review
SP
Leadtime
Leadtime
18 months
Leadtime
Leadtime
2 years
Leadtime
Leadtime
2 years
Review
Review
SP
DLP
DLP
The NPP should be reviewed every five years in tandem with the Review of the FYMP. To
achieve this, data required for such reviews must be made available beforehand for the
exercise to be undertaken in a timely manner. Collection of data for the preparation of a
Review should commence at least two years before the Review. As the custodian of the
LaPiS, it will be incumbent upon DTCP to ensure that the requisite data and information,
particularly the indicators, are kept in review and made available.
6.4.1
6.5
Proposals
The institutional responsibilities for the preparation, implementation, monitoring and
review of the Plan are shown in Table 6.6. The DG of DTCP is charged with the
responsibility of preparing the Plan, monitoring its implementation and keeping it in review
every 5 years.
6 - 25
Implementation Mechanism
department and a number of committees that have been proposed in the Plan such as the
NPPC, NPP Committee, NPPAC, IAPG and TWG.
The Implementation of the plan however will require the support of the various Federal
and State agencies that have a legal duty to adhere to the policies of the NPP. In this
respect it is important that the proposals are translated into plans of action and included in
the subsequent FYMP through the offices of the EPU, Treasury and the NDPC. In order
to enhance the effectiveness of the NDPC, the DG of DTCP shall be made a permanent
member.
Adherence to the recommendations of the NPP will also be manifested in the respective
Structure Plans. One of the key instruments for monitoring the Plan and keeping it in
review is the establishment of the LaPiS to ensure effective exchange of both spatial and
attribute data that is necessary to prepare the plan and its review.
The policies of the NPP will remain applicable unless reviewed or replaced. In carrying
out the review, the DG will rely on the advice of the NPPAC, the NPP Committee,
directions of the NPPC and the application of indicators and research findings to assess
their effectiveness. Critical success factors will depend on the establishment of a clear
Terms of Reference of matters that need to be reviewed. Appropriate IAPG and TWG will
also be established to provide adequate inputs for the Review.
Table 6.6:
Activity
Responsibility
Enabling Law
Enabling Instruments/
Institutions
Plan preparation
DG DTCP
TCPA
Plan Implementation
TCPA
Monitoring
DG DTCP
TCPA
DG DTCP
TCPA
The main proposals for the implementation of the NPP are as follows:
i.
Establish the necessary institutional structure for plan preparation and monitoring.
This will include among others, the strengthening of the National Physical
Planning Division in FDTCP, the establishment of NPP Committee, NPP Advisory
Committee, National Spatial Planning Research Institute, IAPG and relevant
TWG.
6 - 26
ii.
Implementation Mechanism
Once the NPP is approved, the various Federal and State agencies need to
translate these policies into programmes and projects and include them in the
subsequent FYMP.
iii.
iv.
Establishment of the NPP LaPiS at FDTCP and the State Structure Plan Land
Use Information System (SLaPiS) at DTCP State.
6 - 27
List of Abbreviations
ABBREVIATIONS
7MP
8MP
AAGR
AFTA
ASEAN
DG
DID
DLaPiS
DMG
DOA
DOE
DOF
DOS
DTCP
EPU
ERL
ESA
FDI
FYMP
GDP
GIS
IADP
IAPG
ICT
ICU
IMS-GT
IMT GT
IP
KADA
KLIA
KSN
LaPiS
LA 21
LP
LPA
LRT
MADA
MASMA
MDC
MEWC
MHLG
MICE
MITI
MOSTE
MOT
MOU
th
7 Malaysia Plan
th
8 Malaysia Plan
Average Annual Growth Rate
ASEAN Free Trade Agreement
Association of South-East Asian Nations
Director General
Department of Irrigation and Drainage
District Land Use Planning Intelligent System
Department of Mineral and Geoscience
Department of Agriculture
Department of Environment
Department of Forestry
Department of Statistics
Department of Town and Country Planning
Economic Planning Unit
Express Rail Link
Environmentally Sensitive Areas
Foreign Direct Investment
Five Year Malaysia Plans
Gross Domestic Product
Geographic Information System
Integrated Agricultural Development Project
Inter Agency Planning Group
Information and Communication Technology
Implementation and Coordination Unit
Indonesia-Malaysia-Singapore Growth Triangle
Indonesia-Malaysia-Thailand Growth Triangle
Indicative Plan
Kemubu Agricultural Development Authority
Kuala Lumpur International Airport
Chief Secretary to the Government
Land Use Planning Intelligent System
Local Agenda 21
Local Plan
Local Planning Authority
Light-Rail Transit
Muda Agricultural Development Authority
Urban Storm Water Management Manual for Malaysia
Multimedia Development Corporation
Ministry of Energy, Water and Communication
Ministry of Housing and Local Government
Meetings, Incentives, Conventions and Exhibitions
Ministry of International Trade and Industry
Ministry of Science, Technology and Environment
Ministry of Transport
Memorandum of Understanding
MRT
MSC
MyGDI
NAP3
NCLG
NDPC
NFC
NGO
NITA
NLC
NPP
NPPC
NPP Com
NPPAC
NWRC
OIC
OPP
OPP3
PAA
PFE
PPG
PTP
R&D
RDA
REHDA
RGC
RPC
SA
SDO
SEDC
SEPU
SLaPiS
SMA
SME
SMIDEC
SP
SPC
TWG
UN
UNEP
UNDP
USWM
WTO
List of Abbreviations