BREAKING

Saturday, June 6, 2026

The Sun’s Silent Threat: Why Malaysia’s Solar Ambitions Risk Becoming ‘Stranded Assets’

 


Wazzup Pilipinas!? 



For years, the narrative of the energy transition has been one of unbridled optimism: solar costs are plummeting, technology is advancing, and the world is pivoting toward a cleaner horizon. But beneath the surface of Malaysia’s rapidly growing solar capacity—now boasting nearly 5.8 gigawatts—a quiet, systemic fragility is emerging.


As renewable energy leaders gathered at the Energy Transition Conference 2026, the mood was not one of mere celebration. It was a warning. For the architects of Malaysia’s power grid, the solar boom is hitting a perilous bottleneck, one that threatens to turn high-tech green infrastructure into "stranded assets"—investments that lose their value long before they have paid for themselves.


The Tenure Trap

At the heart of the crisis is a fundamental mismatch between the physical reality of solar power and the rigid structures of high finance.


“One of the key problems I have is matching tenure with capital deployment,” says Syahrunizam Samsudin, group CEO of Malakoff Corporation Berhad, the nation’s largest independent power producer.


Clean energy projects are long-term commitments, often requiring decades to recoup the massive upfront costs of infrastructure. Yet, the current financing landscape is struggling to keep pace. When the lifecycle of a power purchase agreement is misaligned with the repayment schedules of capital, margins are squeezed.


This isn't just a headache for industry giants like Malakoff. It is an existential threat to the smaller players, the nimble innovators who form the backbone of a diverse energy market. If the math doesn’t add up—if the financing windows are too short to absorb the inherent volatility of solar—these projects risk becoming stranded, unable to sustain themselves in a market that demands both lower costs and higher reliability.


A Landscape of Shifting Sands

The uncertainty is compounded by a global supply chain in flux. Zarihi Hashim, chief new energy officer at Tenaga Nasional Berhad (TNB), notes that the environment for project developers has grown exponentially more complex in just a few years.


“The costing that we do today is not relevant in a few months’ time,” Zarihi warns.


He points to the staggering volatility of the market: photovoltaic module prices can spike by 30 percent in a matter of months, and the lead times for critical transmission equipment like transformers have stretched to breaking points. In this volatile theater, project developers are finding it increasingly difficult to reach "financial close." A project that looks profitable on paper today may become a liability by the time the equipment arrives.


The Data Centre Paradox

Adding another layer of complexity is the insatiable hunger for energy from Malaysia’s booming data centre sector. These digital titans—hyperscalers, co-location providers, and self-builders—require immense power to run the AI and cloud infrastructure driving the modern economy.


While schemes like the Corporate Renewable Energy Supply Scheme (CRESS) have been designed to bridge the gap between corporate buyers and green energy producers, friction remains. Data centres are often locked into distinct business models, and many are pushing for flexible, short-term power structures.


Conversely, developers and bankers—who need the security of long-term, fixed-price contracts to justify the massive capital expenditure of solar farms—find themselves at odds with the demands of their customers. Guntor Tobeng, managing director of developer Gading Kencana, describes this as the "biggest friction" in scaling the market: the clash between the developer’s need for certainty and the offtaker’s desire for agility.


A Call for a New Financial Architecture

Is the dream of a solar-powered Malaysia at risk? Not necessarily. But the consensus among industry leaders is that the status quo is reaching its limit.


The solutions being floated are as ambitious as the problem is complex. From creating a centralized, transparent platform for price discovery—moving away from a "race to the bottom" on tariffs—to rethinking system access charges and embracing battery energy storage systems, the industry is calling for a more sophisticated financial architecture.


As Malaysia navigates the delicate tightrope between aggressive decarbonization and economic viability, the lesson is clear: the energy transition is not just a technological challenge; it is a financial one. If the nation cannot reconcile the volatility of the present with the long-term demands of a sustainable future, the sun may stop shining on some of its most promising green investments.


The question remains: will the market adjust, or will it leave a trail of stranded assets in its wake? The answer will define Malaysia's energy landscape for decades to come.

The Hidden Cost of Intelligence: AI’s Thirsty Infrastructure

 


Wazzup Pilipinas!? 



In the quiet hum of a digital conversation, we often forget the physical reality powering the machine. When you prompt an AI to write a 100-word email, you aren't just sending data into the cloud; you are triggering an industrial-scale operation. Hidden behind the sleek, ethereal interface of your chatbot lies a massive, thirsty machine that consumes roughly 519 milliliters of water for every brief exchange—the equivalent of a standard bottle of water poured directly into the cooling towers of a data center.


This is the uncomfortable reality of the AI revolution: it is not just silicon and code; it is a profound, escalating reliance on one of our planet’s most precious, dwindling resources.


The Radiators of the Modern Age

To understand why AI is so thirsty, one must look at the hardware. At the heart of today’s generative AI are high-end graphics processing units (GPUs), power-hungry chips that dissipate up to 700 watts each. When tens of thousands of these units operate in concert to train or run a model, they produce heat on a staggering scale.


The primary solution? Evaporative cooling. Data centers act as massive, artificial lungs, breathing in cool air and breathing out water vapor. Approximately 80 percent of the water drawn into these systems is lost to the atmosphere, carrying away the heat generated by our digital demands. As AI clusters become denser and more thermally intense, their thirst is growing faster than any general cloud computing infrastructure before them.


A Global Drain

The scale of this consumption is no longer marginal—it is industrial. According to projections by researchers at the University of California, Riverside, the global infrastructure powering AI could consume the equivalent of half the United Kingdom’s annual water withdrawal by 2027.


The impact is hitting home in the most vulnerable places:


Chile: Google’s plans for a massive data center faced legal hurdles after environmental concerns arose over the impact on the Central Santiago Aquifer, a region locked in a fifteen-year drought.


Mexico: In Querétaro, Microsoft secured rights to millions of liters of water from an aquifer already operating at a significant annual deficit—all while the state endured its worst drought in a century.


The U.S.: Data centers in states like Arizona have faced intense pushback from residents as local water supplies become increasingly contested.


The Fog of Disclosure

Perhaps most concerning is how little we actually know. The industry often operates behind a veil of opaque reporting. Companies frequently conflate "water withdrawal" with "water consumption," and almost universally exclude the indirect water footprint required to generate the massive electricity loads needed to run these facilities.


When researchers at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory calculated the indirect water footprint—the water required for the power plants generating the electricity for these data centers—they found it to be twelve times higher than the direct cooling consumption. Yet, these figures rarely appear in corporate sustainability reports.


The Paradox of Progress

We stand at a crossroads. The industry that is currently placing the greatest strain on our water security is also the one holding the most promise for solving it. Through advanced climate modeling, optimized irrigation, and sophisticated drought-response algorithms, AI could eventually become a tool for planetary stewardship.


But this future is not guaranteed. We are witnessing the most rapid construction of industrial infrastructure in modern history, and the decisions made in boardrooms, government offices, and local zoning meetings today will dictate whether the trade-off is a net gain for humanity or a deepening of our most critical scarcity crisis.


Every query we type is small. But the aggregate is a tide that is rising, and as we chase the promise of digital intelligence, we must ask: at what cost to the physical world upon which we all depend?


This article is for general information and reflection. It is not professional advice.


Are we prioritizing the rapid advancement of artificial intelligence at the expense of the basic resource security of the communities hosting this infrastructure?

The Unlikely Architect: Is Risa Hontiveros the 2028 Flag Bearer We’ve Been Afraid to Choose?

 


Wazzup Pilipinas!? 



We live in a political landscape defined by the "sabi ni"—the hearsay, the edited clips, the manufactured rage, and the dynastic inertia that moves like a glacier. We are tired. We are exhausted by the hollow promise of change and the high cost of corruption.


When we talk about the 2028 presidential race, we aren’t just talking about a person; we are talking about a threshold. Do we continue to cycle through the same brand of personality-driven, patronage-heavy politics, or do we finally demand a standard of governance that actually functions?


I haven't decided on a candidate. But I have decided that if I am going to vote for the future of this country, I am going to do the work. I’m not looking for a savior; I’m looking for a resume. And when you strip away the noise, the disinformation, and the partisan vitriol, you are left with one of the most curious, consistent, and complex records in Philippine political history: Senator Risa Hontiveros.


The Architect of the Possible

There is a fundamental difference between a politician who makes speeches and a legislator who makes law. Since her days as an Akbayan representative, Hontiveros hasn’t just been "present"; she has been an architect.


She authored the laws that govern the modern Filipino experience: from the Mental Health Act and the Safe Spaces Act to the Expanded Maternity Leave Law and the Universal Health Care Act. She was the one who pushed to break medicine monopolies with the Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act long before it was popular to challenge big pharma.


These are not just titles on a CV. These are the tools that millions of Filipinos use every day to survive and thrive. She has managed to turn empathy into policy—a rare feat in a chamber often dominated by ego and backroom deals.


The Inconvenient Truth-Teller

What sets Hontiveros apart—and perhaps what makes her the most "dangerous" candidate in the eyes of the status quo—is her refusal to look away.


While others were measuring the political wind, she was in the trenches.


She exposed the NBN-ZTE deal when Arroyo was at the height of her power.


She called out the war on drugs in 2017, long before the ICC started knocking, recognizing it for the humanitarian disaster it was.


She brought down the curtain on the POGO hubs, linking human trafficking, torture, and money laundering to the highest levels of local government.


She stood against Quiboloy when the institution itself was hesitant to act.


She has been the solitary voice in the room during administrations that demanded total silence. She isn't a newcomer who suddenly found her voice; she is a veteran who has been documenting the rot for twenty years.


The "Old Virus" of Disinformation

If you want to know if someone is a threat to the status quo, look at how the machinery tries to destroy them. The persistent, debunked claim that Hontiveros stole billions from PhilHealth is a case study in modern political gaslighting.


Independent fact-checkers have debunked this repeatedly. The timeline doesn't match; the records don't support it; and the Supreme Court rulings concerning those funds predate her involvement. Yet, it returns every time she threatens a power structure.


Ask yourself: If her record of public service is so easily shredded, why do they rely on a lie that is nearly a decade old? Because they cannot attack her actual work, they must attack her character with a phantom scandal.


The 2028 Dilemma: Machinery vs. Merit

Here is the uncomfortable reality: Risa Hontiveros is not the "popular" candidate in the way we are conditioned to define popularity. Her survey numbers are a testament to the fact that, in the Philippines, name recognition and massive campaign machinery still outperform a track record of integrity.


She knows this. She has publicly committed to stepping aside for a more viable opposition candidate if the numbers demand it—a level of ego-management that is almost alien in the cutthroat world of Philippine politics.


But the question remains for the voter: Are we actually looking for "the winner," or are we looking for the person who is actually doing the work?


The Verdict?

Risa Hontiveros makes sense not because she is a perfect candidate—no such thing exists—but because she is a proven one. She has a resume that intersects with every major issue facing the Philippines today: labor, health, foreign policy, and justice.


If you are looking for a candidate who will play the game, she is not your choice. But if you are tired of the game—if you are tired of the dynasties, the theft, and the silence of our leaders—then she represents something far more radical than any protest slogan. She represents a standard.


The 2028 election will be the moment we decide who we are. Do we want a leader who reflects our worst habits, or one who challenges us to be better?


I am still doing my homework. But if "good governance, accountability, honesty, and integrity" are the metrics we are using, then Risa Hontiveros isn't just a participant in the race—she is the bar against which all others must be measured.


This is not a campaign endorsement. This is a challenge to dig deeper. Do your own research. Read the laws. Look at the committee records. Don’t let anyone do the thinking for you.

Ang Pambansang Blog ng Pilipinas Wazzup Pilipinas and the Umalohokans. Ang Pambansang Blog ng Pilipinas celebrating 10th year of online presence
 
Copyright © 2013 Wazzup Pilipinas News and Events
Design by FBTemplates | BTT