Astro Awani, Photo Credit to panborneo.com.my
clock 15-09-2017
hit 5,712
Pan Borneo Highway, No Ordinary Road

On paper, the 2,000-kilometre long Pan Borneo Highway stretches from Telok Melano at the southwestern tip of Sarawak to Serudong in Sabah across Brunei. Now in its third year of implementation, the mega project is being viewed as a potential game changer that can catalyse the economic growth in the areas where the road traverses.

Quite unlike Peninsular Malaysia's 772km-long PLUS highway where motorists have to pay a toll of more than RM100 to travel from Bukit Kayu Hitam, Kedah, to Johor Bahru, the Pan Borneo Highway is going to be toll-free.

The Pan Borneo Highway was first announced by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak in April 2013 as part of Barisan Nasional's manifesto during the 13th General Election and it was later formalised in Budget 2015.

The project's objective is to accelerate the social and economic growth of Sabah and Sarawak so that no community is left behind in the federal government's efforts to bring progress to all Malaysians.

Sarawak's portion of the Pan Borneo Highway was launched by Najib in Bintulu in March 2015, and Sabah's in April 2016.

The entire project, estimated to cost RM29 billion, is expected to be completed in 2023.

Initially, the 300-odd people living in Telok Melano, about 100km from Kuching, were not expected to benefit from the Pan Borneo Highway project as their village was not included in the original highway plan.

The Pan Borneo Highway Sarawak project was originally supposed to link Sematan to Miri.

However, the construction of a 32.7km road connecting Telok Melano to Sematan, costing RM580 million, was added to the project following a request by the late chief minister Tan Sri Adenan Satem, who was concerned about the welfare of the Telok Melano folk.

Work on this stretch is currently ongoing and it is expected to be completed by 2019.

The completion of the Telok Melano-Sematan road is expected to boost tourism as the beach at the picturesque fishing village offers panoramic views and delicious seafood is available there too.

Currently, about 25 out of the 54 families living there offer homestay packages.

COASTAL ROAD ALSO A PRIORITY PROJECT Works Minister Datuk Seri Fadillah Yusof said recently that the government was committed to completing the Pan Borneo Highway project on time.

He also reiterated the government's commitment to building the proposed coastal network of feeder roads which will provide the state's coastal areas better access to the Sarawak Corridor of Renewable Energy (SCORE) growth nodes and the Pan Borneo Highway.

The proposed coastal network will include the construction of three bridges - at Batang Lupar, Batang Igan and Batang Rambungan - at a total cost of RM1.4 billion.

It will connect towns like Kota Samarahan, Sadong Jaya, Sebuyau, Kabong, Tanjong Manis, Daro, Matu, Balingian and Bintulu to the Pan Borneo Highway.

Contractor Abang Abdul Kadir, 38, cannot wait for the coastal road network to become a reality as his business requires him to commute frequently to the small towns located in the coastal areas.

He is confident that the new network would shorten the travelling time for him, besides rendering transportation more efficient and comfortable for the local communities there.

He said the 1.48km Batang Sadong bridge, which was opened last December, was a boon to the people living in Kota Samarahan and Sadong Jaya as it enabled them to travel safely and efficiently.

"However, to travel further up north, more roads and bridges have to be built," he said.

The feeder roads (that would form part of the coastal network) would lead to improved accessibility for people living in villages and longhouses in remote areas which, he added, was in line with the government's agenda of inclusivity.






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