global science and innovation advisory council briefing to malaysian financial institutions...
TRANSCRIPT
Global Science And Innovation Advisory Council
Briefing to Malaysian Financial Institutions
Potential Future in Malaysian Biomass Industry
26 September 2011
Joint Secretariat :
Introduction on GSIAC
Content
1. Background of GSIAC
2. Inaugural Council Meeting on May 17,
2011
3. Implementation Governance
4. GSIAC Program 1- MBI
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Overview
• A Malaysian delegation visit to US was headed by YAB Prime Minister from 25 to 30 September 2010
• One of the announcements made during the visit was the setting up of the Global Science and Innovation Advisory Council (GSIAC) for Malaysia in New York
• GSIAC will be chaired by the Prime Minister and consist of selected ministers, corporate leaders and academics – Malaysia & New York Academy of Sciences President’s Council Members
• The Advisory Council is deemed a crucial added value to the efforts of the Malaysian Government to make a quantum jump from middle-income country to a high-income economy by the year 2020
Structure of the Council
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Members of the Council
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The Council comprises 35 members - 10 from Malaysia and 25 international members from China, India, Russia, Japan, Korea, The Netherlands,
the UK and the USA.
Background of GSIAC
Objectives of the GSIAC Council
1. Providing strategic advice and as sounding board on Malaysia’s aspirations of being a developed nation by 2020, through science and innovation;
2. Benchmarking Malaysia’s ranking and competitiveness in Science and Innovation against technologically advanced countries, and improving Malaysia’s capabilities in science and innovation;
3. Value adding to the achievement of Malaysia’s economic transformation programme objectives;
4. Intensify capacity building through industry-academia collaboration with world experts and globally renowned organisation;
5. Generating and increasing bilateral trade and investment value in short, medium and longer-term.
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Background of GSIAC
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2. Framework for Focus Areas :
1. Theme : “ Intensifying Sustainable and Balanced Growth Based on Innovation-led Economy ”
• Malaysia’s existing strengths in the palm oil industry create opportunities for immediate technological and economic gains.
• Green Future promotes new economic opportunities and sustainability by ensuring industrial efficiencies, sustainable consumption and production and emphasis towards zero pollution.
• Green Futures will revolutionize the sourcing and usage of new technologies in energy, water, herbal pharmaceuticals, buildings and the transportation sector.
• This paper identify challenges and provides highly plausible
measures to overcome them through the implementation models (Public Private Partnership, Center of Excellence and Multi Source Investment ).
Synopsis : Green Futures
High Impact Programs / Projects : •Palm Oil Biomass•Solar•3rd Generation Biofuel•Eco-labeling
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The Inaugural Meeting on May 17,2011
1. The inaugural GSIAC Meeting was held on May 17th, 2011 in New York, chaired by PM, attended by 25 council members.
2. There were 2 main presentations: Green Futures and the Innovative Digital Economy. 2 other main themes were also discussed: Smart cities / Smart villages and Human Capacity Building.
The Chairman endorsed 3 key high impact programs:
Program 1 : Malaysian Biomass Initiative (MBI);Program 2 : Smart Cities/Smart Village;Program 3 : Human Capacity Building.
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Content
1. Background of GSIAC
2. Inaugural Council Meeting on
May 17, 2011
3. Implementation Governance
4. GSIAC Program 1-MBI
Background of GSIAC
Strategies for Program Implementation
• Supporting current national priorities
(1Malaysia, NEM, GTP & ETP).
• Inclusive - Implementable downstream
projects nationwide.
• Early wins through Pioneer Projects
• Industry led (for projects).
• Through Private-Public Partnership or
Private Funding Initiative.
• Allows participation of local SMEs.
• High Impact - Economic & high skilled job
creation.
• In line with sustainable development and
low-carbon.
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Content
1. Background of GSIAC
2. Inaugural Council Meeting on
May 17, 2011
3. Implementation Governance
4. GSIAC Program 1-MBI
Background of GSIAC
Biomass Technology for Uptaking by SMEs
EU-Malaysia Biomass SP
Biomass and Clean Development Mechanism
Concepts, Trends, Perspectives in Enviromental Performace
Optimising and Benchmarking the Economic Value of Biomass
Success Stories of Biomass Conversion/SCP Projects
Financing & Funding Opportunities
Policy Intervention via Economic Instruments
EU Market Access Opportunities for Biomass Product
Pelleting Technology
NATIONAL BIOMASS ACTION PLANS
OILPALMBIOMASS ROADMAP
FORESTRYMUNICIPAL
SOLIDWASTE
AGRO OTHERS
EU-Switch AsiaProject by MIGHT
National Biomass Planning
Macroeconomic Study
Malaysia Innovation Agency (AIM)
1 Vision
• To be the market leader in high value green chemicals through excellence in technology development , capacity building and enabling infrastructure.
4 Strategies
• Biomass aggregation – to establish collection hubs at strategic locations.
• Local capacity building - to attract technology companies to Joint Venture with local players.
• To prepare SMEs uptake in the green chemical to produce products
• Establishment of policy and related enablers.
6 Early wins
• Operationalisation of Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) for MBI.
• Launching on Oil Palm Integrated Cluster.
• Pledges by Technology Companies
7 Key collaborators• Private sector – Felda & Sime Darby.• Government- KeTTHA, MOSTI, MOHE,
MPOB,AIM,Biotech C, MIGHT & Academia.
3 Key issues
……need to coordinate biomass supply & accelerate local capability
• The need to reap full value from biomass through fractionation process
• Supply biomass need to be more coordinated.
• Current industry focus to capitalise on the Feed-In-Tarriff (FIT) through converting biomass into energy.
2 Objective
• To capitalise on Malaysia’s existing strengths in the oil palm industry & uptapped opportunities from biomass, for technological and economic gains.
• Shift focus to downstream production of higher value bio-based chemicals & products manufacturing.
• To attract the anticipated full scale commecialisation of bio-based R&D
by global technology companies by 2013-14.
5 2020 Impact
RM 100 B
90,000Jobs creation
Economic-Add Revenue
Program 1 : Malaysian Biomass Initiative (MBI)
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Need To Reap Full Value Of Our Raw Materials Through Fractionation
Centralized collector
Value Generated from
‘Whole’ Use
RM275 per ton biomass
RM55 per ton biomass
Wholly burned for power
Biomass
Biomass
Wholly mulched/ composted for fertilizer
Value from Fractionation
Fermentable sugars (C5, C6)
Lignin
Ash/Char
Silica
Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Magnesium, Calcium
RM800-4000/T biomass
RM150-1000/T biomass
RM100-300/T biomass
[tbd]
RM55/ton biomass
Bio-chemicals
Power/additive
Power/Fertilizer
Chems, glass
Fertilizer
vs.
Biomass
Higher Value Output :
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Oil Palm Biomass Value Chain
Bio BasedProduct
Manufacturers
• Biomass Policy• Biomass Roadmap • Ecosystem devt.• Meeting RE national
target• Capacity building• SME devt.• Job creation• Economic activities
FeldaSime Darby
Plantations
Aggregation
Technology Companies
Biomass supply
Biomass demand
Supply of high value chemical(Bioplastics, pharma related, etc.)
UPSTREAM
MIDSTREAM
DOWNSTREAM
RelatedSupport Services
Providers
Stakeholders : Role / Impact :
1
2A3
Biomass Clusteron site
4 Local Value Chain Development
5Ecosystem
Development
MIGHT
AIM
Initial Biomasssupplier
Facilitator(Aggregator SPV formation)
Facilitator on Commercialisation(Consortium formation)
EPUMIGHTMOFMITIOther MinistriesMPOBBiotech CorpMLSCF
Pre-treatment 2B
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MBI Implementation Model
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Thank You
www.might.org.my/gsiac
Joint Secretariat :