Categories: NewsTelco

Cabotage issue: Ministers instructed to deliberate impact on digital investments and shipping industry

The Cabinet raised the issue of the cabotage policy exemption for submarine cable repairs in its meeting earlier today, said Science, Technology and Innovation Minister Khairy Jamaluddin.

He said several ministers including himself have been instructed to deliberate on the impact that the cabotage policy exemption would have on digital investments and the local shipping industry

“We are to report back in two weeks with recommendations,” Khairy said in a tweet.

The others include the international trade and industry minister, finance minister, communications and multimedia minister, transport minister, minister in charge of the economic planning unit, and entrepreneur development and cooperatives minister.

The repeal of the cabotage exemption, finalised on November 18 last year, has been blamed as the main reason why Malaysia was excluded from a joint megaproject by tech giants Facebook and Google to construct two underwater cables to increase Internet connectivity between Singapore, Indonesia and North America.

Transport Minister Datuk Seri Wee Ka Siong defended the repeal as necessary to reduce the outflow of foreign currency through freight charges, and to reduce dependencies on foreign vessels by promoting participation from local shipping industry, among others.

This was met with criticism by other MPs, most notably during a Dewan Rakyat session on November 25, 2020, when his predecessor Anthony Loke and former communications and multimedia minister Gobind Singh Deo argued against his rationale.

The heated debate saw Loke saying that the repeal of the exemption will have detrimental effects and result in a loss of confidence among investors, as the exemption would not have just benefited a handful of companies but the entire nation as well.

Gobind reminded Wee that faulty cable highlight repairs take an average of 27 days to complete, indicating that Malaysia faces problems when it comes to conducting undersea cable repairs.

He added the cabotage exemption was decided upon by the former Pakatan Harapan administration after requests were made by tech giants to resolve the issue.  — Malay Mail

[ IMAGE SOURCE ]

Related reading

Recent Posts

Gobind: DNB and newly appointed directors to meet next week to look into due diligence findings

Digital Minister Gobind Singh shared today that the newly reconstituted board of Digital Nasional Berhad…

2 hours ago

We experienced Samsung’s flagship smart home showroom in Thailand. Here’s what we saw

Samsung gave us a tour of its first flagship smart home showroom in Thailand, located…

3 hours ago

JPJ recalls 600 units of Omoda 5 in Malaysia, Chery to arrange inspections as soon as possible

The Road Transport Department (JPJ) has issued an immediate recall notice for 600 Chery Omoda…

5 hours ago

BYD Atto 3 2024 Malaysia: Larger 15.6″ screen, new colours and no more “Build Your Dreams” badge

Shortly after announcing price cuts for the 2023 models, Sime Darby Motors officially announced the…

7 hours ago

DNB and Ericsson to develop enterprise 5G solutions with Intel, eMooVit, Scania and SKF

Digital Nasional Berhad (DNB) and Ericsson are working with Intel, eMooVit, Scania and SKF Malaysia…

11 hours ago

BMW iX1 eDrive20 Malaysia: BMW’s cheapest fully electric SUV, up to 475km range

BMW Malaysia has recently announced the arrival of the iX1 eDrive20 M Sport and this…

15 hours ago

This website uses cookies.