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GRS and Pakatan to contest Sabah election as electoral pact

GRS and Pakatan to contest Sabah election as electoral pact

The Star6 days ago
KOTA KINABALU: Gabungan Rakyat Sabah (GRS) and Pakatan Harapan will contest the upcoming Sabah state election as an electoral pact, confirmed GRS chairman Datuk Seri Hajiji Noor.
'We will continue the cooperation between GRS and Pakatan as it stands today,' he said after officiating the Parti Gagasan Rakyat Sabah (PGRS) annual general assembly at the Sabah International Convention Centre (SICC) on Sunday (July 27).
When asked if the GRS component parties had agreed to the arrangement, Hajiji replied 'Agreed.'
Asked whether the seat allocation formula had been worked out, Hajiji said, 'Of course, but not finalised. Only a few things to sort out.' He nodded when asked if the electoral pact was confirmed.
Earlier, in his speech to PGRS delegates, Hajiji said since "Langkah Kinabalu" in 2023, GRS and Pakatan have formed a strong collaboration, which continues today.
"We will maintain this strong collaboration. This is the partnership that can now bring real benefits.'
Earlier in his speech, Hajiji also remarked, 'Our master is here, our master is not there,' indicating that GRS, as a local Sabah-based coalition, intends to assert dominance in shaping Sabah's political course.
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Will China win the renewables race while US pivots to fossil fuels and nuclear?
Will China win the renewables race while US pivots to fossil fuels and nuclear?

The Star

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  • The Star

Will China win the renewables race while US pivots to fossil fuels and nuclear?

US President Donald Trump's signature budget bill, signed into law earlier this month, marked a startling pivot towards fossil fuels and nuclear power, reigniting a fierce debate over how best to balance the country's energy future with its national security. The act, known officially as the One Big Beautiful Bill, rolls back Joe Biden era subsidies for solar, wind and electric vehicles – a dramatic reversal of long-standing US support for clean energy in a world racing towards decarbonisation. At the same time, the act preserves subsidies for nuclear projects, particularly fusion, which is framed as a dependable, low-carbon energy source and a long-term strategy to lessen US reliance on rare earths. Washington has described the energy overhaul as a strategic imperative rooted in national security concerns – especially after Beijing leveraged its near-monopoly over rare earths in the renewed US-China trade war. 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'But starting in the 2000s, the Republican Party began to oppose any action on climate change, and renewable energy began to lose its bipartisan character. At the same time, supporting coal became a symbol of the culture war, more than [something] substantive or strategic.' Hove – whose public and private sector experience in energy policy and markets includes 12 years in China and nine on Wall Street – noted that the US under Trump and Biden, as well as Europe, each had distinct strategies to reduce their reliance on foreign sources. 'The Biden approach was more similar to Europe's, in the sense of working with trading partners like Canada or Chile to diversify critical minerals supply – including processing,' he said. Sun Haiyong, a researcher at the American Studies Centre of the Shanghai Institutes for International Studies, observed that fossil fuel interests were a core base for the Republican Party, which often downplayed climate mitigation in favour of economic and political priorities. 'The current US shift towards fossil fuels is driven mostly by the interest groups behind the Trump administration,' he said, adding that the lack of competitiveness in clean energy equipment manufacturing was also contributing to its retreat from renewables. 'Most production capacity for wind and solar technologies, energy storage systems and other related equipment is concentrated in China, which also holds technological and production advantages in processing and raw material extraction – particularly for critical minerals needed in energy transition technologies like wind turbines and energy storage.' Sun noted that there were also 'short-term economic benefits' for the Trump administration in ramping up fossil fuel production and exports – including greater economic leverage over Europe and support for the increasingly unstable US dollar. Meanwhile, China is projected to contribute 60 per cent of the world's expansion in renewable energy capacity by 2030, according to the International Energy Agency. The country produced roughly half of global solar capacity in 2023, while accounting for more than 60 per cent of global EV production. Tom Moerenhout, head of the Critical Materials Initiative at Columbia University's Centre on Global Energy Policy, said the US' entrenched status as a major producer, consumer, and exporter of fossil fuels was a driving force behind the sweeping policy shift. 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It's just that the US is not going to compete globally,' he said. 'It's a very immature and problematic industrial policy if your goal is to be a player in tomorrow's world rather than someone left behind.' The new legislation is also designed to insulate the US economy by disqualifying products made with Chinese components or resources from federal subsidies – a move that has prompted several critical questions. Li, from the Asia Society Policy Institute, noted that with the scrapping of the IRA and the new legislation's rules limiting access to Chinese green technologies, the US cleantech landscape faced constraints on two fronts. '[The US] refuses to import Chinese clean technologies – as per Biden's original stance – and, with Trump's repeal of the IRA, it has also surrendered much of its domestic manufacturing capacity,' he said. 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The long-standing global climate storyline, in which developed countries push developing ones to accelerate action, may well be rewritten in reverse In Shanghai, Sun raised similar doubts about the long-term viability of Washington's pivot to fossil fuels, which he said 'cannot serve as a long-term energy solution for the US'. He said this was mainly because of the growing environmental impacts of fracking, the urgent need to address climate change, and the inevitable policy shifts driven by changes in political leadership. 'As for nuclear fusion, while the technology pathway is viable, its commercialisation is still a long way off,' he said, adding that construction of new nuclear power projects or the restart of previously halted ones in the US had long been plagued by delays, cost overruns and cancellations. Sun also cautioned against overstating the importance of the new legislation, pointing out that there were 'significant hurdles in advancing re-industrialisation'. 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PBS wants to play key role in consolidating GRS coalition
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Nintendo reports robust early sales of Switch 2, keeps full-year forecast
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New Straits Times

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Nintendo reports robust early sales of Switch 2, keeps full-year forecast

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