First green building in Sabah helps fight global warming
By Nurhafizah Yusof
Pictures by Oliver Majaham
| Masidi Manjun | 
Sabah’s first green building is helping to stop the world from getting warmer. The 16m-ringgit ($5m) Sabah Art Gallery Conservation Centre can save the government as much as 400,000 ringgit a year in electricity, 297 ringgit in water and cut carbon dioxide emission down by 780 tonnes that will help keep average global warming below 2oC to prevent an environmental disaster.
“This building can save up to one megawatt of electricity per year,” said Masidi Manjun, minister of tourism, culture and environment, as he received the Green Building Index certificate from Boon Che Wee, chairman of the GBI accreditation panel on June 29.
“This building can save up to one megawatt of electricity per year,” said Masidi Manjun, minister of tourism, culture and environment, as he received the Green Building Index certificate from Boon Che Wee, chairman of the GBI accreditation panel on June 29.
| Light and air from the sky. | 
| Staiway to ... | 
The four-storey building at Jalan Penampang is designed to reduce  power consumption by using natural light and solar panels for lighting  and air-conditioning. Energy saving lights switch off by themself when  there are no visitors at the art gallery. And the main power supply is  triggered on days when natural light is lacking or solar panels are  unable to power lights and air-conditioners. 
Thus electricity consumption will be greatly reduced to 900  kilowatt-hours a day, according to Jennifer Linggi, the curator of the  gallery. Power cost will thus be a relatively low 107,000 ringgit a year  against about 480,000 ringgit if the building were to run on supply  solely from Sabah Electricity Sendirian Berhad, the state’s power  company.
| Solar panels cut carbon dioxide emission. | 
The art gallery will also save about 330,000 litres of water a year  by harvesting rainwater to flush toilets, clean the building and water  the garden. This represents a saving of 32% of the water need of the  building. That is enough water for about 1,500 people. But 330,000  litres cost only 297 ringgit because water at 90 sen per 1,000 litres is  comparatively cheap.
But making the building environmentally friendly will reduce carbon  dioxide emission, blamed for global warming, by 780 tonnes a year. That  is the amount of carbon dioxide emitted by 390 people every year.
The figure may not seem significant considering that it takes 1.8  trillion tonnes of carbon dioxide to raise atmospheric temperature by  one degree Celsius. But then there are thousands of buildings, many of  them many times bigger than the art gallery in Sabah. And taking all the  millions of buildings in the world, carbon reduction of the Sabah art  gallery is indeed a significant step in the fight against global  warming.
Buildings use up 40% of energy, 12% of water and send 40% of waste to  landfill. And they thus are responsible for much of global warming and  pollution. – Insight Sabah
Sumber | http://insightsabah.gov.my/article/read/1852 
Category: bangunan hijau sabah, insight sabah, masidi manjun, sabah, solar panel
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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