13 hours ago
Fadillah: High time to reimagine water sector
KUALA LUMPUR: The country's pipeline systems must be modernised to strengthen operational performance and reimagine the water sector as a model of resilience, sustainability and service excellence, says Datuk Seri Fadillah Yusof (pic).
The Deputy Prime Minister said the water sector is at a defining point, with latest decisions shaping the reliability, sustainability and equity of water services for future generations.
Opening the Water Malaysia 2025 Specialised Conference and Exhibition here yesterday, he said the event theme reflected the urgent need to modernise the pipeline systems.
'It is also to strengthen operational efficiency and address the pressing challenges of leakages and (service) disruptions, and the opportunity to reimagine Malaysia's water sector,' he said in his address, Bernama reported.
The Water Malaysia 2025 Specialised Conference and Exhibition carries the theme 'Pipeline Materials, Design, Construction, Monitoring and Maintenance for Water and Sewerage Systems'.
Fadillah, who is also Energy Transition and Water Transformation Minister, said reforms will be anchored on four strategic pillars – efficiency first, digital transformation, resilience planning and stakeholder engagement.
'Efficiency must be integrated from design to operation, taking into account not only initial costs but also the full lifecycle value, environmental impact and benefits to the community.'
Fadillah also said the government will adopt condition-based asset replacement programmes, standardise materials to prevent corrosion and set up water knowledge hubs as centres of excellence to capture, share and scale best practices in rehabilitation and rapid response.
'These are not small measures. They are bold steps towards a future where our assets last longer, our water systems are resilient and the rakyat experiences a higher quality of service every day,' he added.
Fadillah said the transformation requires financing that rewards innovation, adding that water utility funding will be restructured through performance-linked mechanisms while green investment instruments, including bonds, will be mobilised to accelerate sustainable infrastructure.
'These are not just financial instruments. They are investments in resilience, predictive maintenance and smart infrastructure deployment.
'The true return will be measured not merely in ringgit, but in trust, sustainability and service excellence for the rakyat.'
Fadillah said technology alone could not drive change as it is engineers, technicians, operators and leaders who were the true drivers of progress.
As such, a future-ready workforce will be built through water academies, mentoring programmes and continuous talent development initiatives, he said.
He said accountability and public confidence will be reinforced through stricter pipeline quality standards, mandatory inspections and transparent reporting via a Pipeline Accountability Portal, which offers real-time updates on disruptions, leakage rates and resolution timelines.
'Today, we are laying down not only pipelines of steel, but also pipelines of trust, innovation and hope, ensuring Malaysia's water sector becomes a benchmark for the region,' he said.
Malaysian Water Association president Mohamad Hairi Basri, in his address, said the event provided a strategic platform to strengthen cross-sector collaboration, promote sustainable practices, enhance technical capabilities and create opportunities for innovation and investment.
The two-day conference brings together engineers, industry practitioners, suppliers and stakeholders from across Malaysia and the region.