logo
KKDW intensifies promotion of Lake Kenyir

KKDW intensifies promotion of Lake Kenyir

The Sun21-04-2025
KUALA TERENGGANU: The Ministry of Rural and Regional Development (KKDW), through the Central Terengganu Development Board (Ketengah), will intensify efforts to promote Lake Kenyir in preparation for Visit Malaysia Year 2026.
Its deputy minister, Datuk Rubiah Wang said the initiative is part of a broader strategy to address the noticeable decline in tourist arrivals to the area following the COVID-19 pandemic.
'We are aware that the number of visitors declined during the COVID-19 period, but according to information from Ketengah, the number of tourists visiting Lake Kenyir has started to rise again since last year,' she told reporters after officiating the state-level 2025 KKDW Clients' Day here today.
She said Ketengah has been working closely with the state government to further enhance tourism products and activities at Lake Kenyir, the largest man-made lake in Southeast Asia.
She noted that although the management and certain operations at the lake are overseen by Ketengah, jurisdiction over Lake Kenyir remains with the state government, necessitating strong cooperation to ensure the lake's full tourism potential is realised.
In addition, Rubiah said Ketengah is actively collaborating with various stakeholders, including the Malaysian Association of Tour and Travel Agents (MATTA), to position Lake Kenyir as a must-visit destination in Terengganu.
She acknowledged that strategic partnerships and increased promotional efforts are key to revitalising tourism in the area, especially in the lead-up to Visit Malaysia Year 2026.
Previously, Terengganu Culture, Environment and Climate Change Committee chairman Datuk Razali Idris reported a steady decline in tourist arrivals to Lake Kenyir over recent years.
Visitors dropped from 775,979 in 2018 to 607,398 in 2019, followed by a sharp fall to 208,097 in 2020 due to the pandemic.
The numbers slightly improved in 2021 with 277,969 visitors, but dipped again to 246,896 in 2022 and 218,157 in 2023.
However, Razali noted a positive turnaround last year, with tourist numbers rising to 396,715, signalling renewed interest in the destination and the potential impact of ongoing recovery and promotional efforts.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Thailand celebrates 19pct US tariff, avoids 36pct threat
Thailand celebrates 19pct US tariff, avoids 36pct threat

New Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • New Straits Times

Thailand celebrates 19pct US tariff, avoids 36pct threat

BANGKOK: Thailand welcomed on Friday the 19 per cent trade tariff imposed by US President Donald Trump as a "major success", a government spokesman said, averting a threatened levy of 36 per cent. Trump ordered stiff tariffs on dozens of trading partners in an effort to reshape global trade in favour of the US economy. Thailand has been negotiating with Washington for weeks, seeking a reduction in the 36 per cent levy on key exports threatened under Trump's "Liberation Day" measures. "This finalised deal, setting US import tariffs at 19 per cent, marks a major success for Thailand," Thai government spokesman Jirayu Huangsab said in a statement. Featured Videos "It represents a win-win approach aimed at preserving Thailand's export base and long-term economic stability." The United States' goods trade deficit with Thailand hit US$45.6 billion in 2024, up 11.7 per cent from the year before, according to US Trade Representative data. Thailand has struggled to reignite its economy since the Covid-19 pandemic, when travel restrictions hammered the key tourism sector. The Thai government in May cut its 2025 economic growth forecast to 2.3-3.3 percent, from 3.2-4.2 per cent, citing uncertainty over tariffs. Growth in 2024 was 2.5 per cent. The tariff announcement on Thursday in Washington came days after Trump intervened to help broker a ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia. Five days of heavy border clashes between the two neighbours – their deadliest in decades – left more than 40 people dead and 300,000 evacuated from their homes.--AFP

Paradise beaches sit empty as Indonesia bets on saturated Bali
Paradise beaches sit empty as Indonesia bets on saturated Bali

The Star

time2 hours ago

  • The Star

Paradise beaches sit empty as Indonesia bets on saturated Bali

JAKARTA: At Ora Beach on Indonesia's Seram Island, framed by tropical vegetation and dramatic limestone cliffs, the waters are aquarium-like and there's nary an influencer with smartphone in sight. It's a Maldives experience, for a fraction of the price. Some 1,600 kilometres away in Bali - not that there's any direct flight - traffic snarls around temple corners, the air is thick with noise pollution from motorbikes, plastic trash is matted into gutters and the surge of visitors has, in many places, eclipsed the island's deeper spiritual essence. And yet, that's where the government is placing most of its tourism bets. Officials want Bali, about 1.5 times the size of Rhode Island, to be a holiday escape and everything else besides. There are plans to establish Bali as a family office hub, an export centre for seaweed and President Prabowo Subianto in late June inaugurated the Sanur Special Economic Zone to develop medical tourism. As Indonesia's most internationally recognised destination, banking on Bali was a deliberate strategy to help the South-East Asian nation's vital tourism sector recover in the aftermath of the pandemic. But that approach isn't paying off, with the province's economic growth slowing as visitors' spending declines. Meanwhile, tourism operators in other parts of the country are crying out for investment. Irfan Muddin, who has run Ora Sunrise View Resort since 2018, has been lobbying local authorities for years to improve connectivity to boost tourism in Maluku province. "An airport could be built on Seram Island that would enable direct domestic and international flights,' he said, adding that regional airfares should also come down. Tourism in Indonesia - an archipelago of more than 17,000 islands - as a whole still hasn't fully returned to pre-Covid levels, a milestone that Vietnam and Thailand are close to achieving. Bali itself however is suffering from overtourism, with visitor numbers in 2024 already exceeding those in 2019. "Is Indonesia squandering its tourism potential? In many ways, yes, but not because it lacks natural beauty,' Samer El Hajjar, a senior lecturer in marketing at Singapore's NUS Business School, said. "It's more about execution. There's a gap between potential and policy, between what Indonesia could offer and what it currently does.' A major obstacle in boosting tourism spots besides Bali is the lack of coordination among ministries and local government to ramp up infrastructure and improve connectivity. Indonesia's government has previously tried to prioritise creating 10 "new Balis' in other areas, but these projects have quietly fallen by the wayside. Indonesia's tourism ministry didn't respond to a request for comment. After a slump during the height of Covid, the reopening of borders saw visitors flock to Bali, which garnered pop-culture status after being featured in the 2010 film Eat, Pray, Love. In 2024, nearly half of Indonesia's roughly 13.9 million foreign visitors went to the province. From a quiet, agrarian, Hindu oasis, Bali has transformed into a nightlife hotspot that offers both ultimate luxury - whole villas that run close to US$3,000 a night - to budget basics, with guest houses that go for as little as US$20. It's also become a mecca for wellness enthusiasts and is attempting to become a medical hub that offers cosmetic procedures to neonatal care. The government estimates that the island's two economic zones, one focused specifically around medical tourism, could bring in over US$33 billion by 2052. But the tourism boom isn't translating into sustained gains. Bali's economic growth declined to 5.5 per cent last year from 5.7 per cent in 2023, in part due to a decline in average spending of international tourists. Typically deep-pocketed Chinese have been particularly missed, with the number of visitors from the country just a third of 2019's level. In essence, Bali is a victim of its own success. Crowds of tourists throng streets and videos of snarling traffic in party hot spots such as Canggu have gone viral, prompting comparisons to Indonesia's capital Jakarta, notorious for its jammed roads. Foreign investors building villas are eating into the tranquility of the terraced paddy fields that helped make Bali famous in the first place. Life has changed substantially for locals too. Construction work threatens the delicate structures of the island's sacred Hindu temples and water is getting harder to come by - over 65 per cent of Bali's fresh water is channeled to resorts and plunge pools, leading to over-extraction as villages turn to using groundwater. Over at Ora Beach in Maluku province, a stream of what looks like dark black smoke arises from the mountains at 6:20 p.m. on the dot, everyday. It's actually thousands of bats flying out of a nearby cave to hunt for their dinner. As visitors go island hopping, they can catch a view of dolphins and turtles coming up from the deep for air. But what Bali has that Seram Island lacks is infrastructure and connectivity. The island doesn't have an airport, for instance. One way to get to Ora Beach is to fly three and a half hours east from Jakarta to Ambon, take a two hour ferry to Seram Island and then another one hour car ride - a close to seven hour trip. Even then, there are only two ferry services a day, which carry more people than the maximum allowed limit. Sinkings in Indonesia are commonplace. Similarly, there are no international flights to Lake Toba, the largest volcanic lake in the world. From Samosir Island, visitors can take in views of the lake and the surrounding hills. Although some hotels have sprouted and Lake Toba will host the F1H2O Powerboat World Championship in late August, tourism development is still slow. Another untapped gem is Raja Ampat, located off the northwest tip of Papua. Its more than 1,500 cays and shoals are widely recognised as hosting the world's most diverse coral reef ecosystem. Again, there are no international flights. Still, there have been some efforts. As part of Widodo's huge infrastructure spending spree, airports were upgraded or new ones built. The airfield on Labuan Bajo, near where Komodo dragons can be found, was expanded in 2022 and last year, international flights from Malaysia and Singapore were added. Cafes and restaurants that wouldn't look out of place in Bali have mushroomed. The number of tourists in 2024 was triple 2016. It's not just a short-term challenge. The opportunity cost of not sustainably developing tourism in remote destinations could increase each year, with competition for tourist dollars intensifying both domestically and with neighbouring countries, said Lavanya Venkateswaran, senior Asean economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. Indonesia already lags regional competitors like Thailand, where tourists have several beach options from Phuket to Koh Samui and Krabi. Vietnam, also much smaller geographically, boasts comparatively a lot of holiday alternatives such as Ha Long Bay and Sa Pa in the north to Phu Quoc, which is undergoing a major infrastructure and tourism transformation ahead of hosting Apec 2027, including an augmented airport designed to handle 50 million passengers by 2050. "To truly compete, Indonesia needs to act more like a tourism federation, empowering provinces and building unique destinations within the national umbrella,' El Hajjar said. "The potential is there. What's needed is stronger political will, better coordination and a tourism mindset that treats the country not as one place but as a constellation of remarkable experiences waiting to be discovered.' - Bloomberg

Sarawak business group hails 13MP aims to boost state growth, clean energy
Sarawak business group hails 13MP aims to boost state growth, clean energy

The Star

time2 hours ago

  • The Star

Sarawak business group hails 13MP aims to boost state growth, clean energy

KUCHING: The core elements of the 13th Malaysia Plan (13MP) are aligned with Sarawak's goals of accelerating growth under its post-Covid development strategy, says the Dayak Chamber of Commerce and Industry (DCCI). Its secretary general Libat Langub ( pic ) welcomed the special emphasis on elevating Sabah and Sarawak as Malaysia's competitive regional hubs for sustainable energy. "The initiative includes the development of the Sarawak Hydrogen Hub, aimed at strengthening the energy infrastructure in Sarawak. "This demonstrates the Federal Government's commitment and recognition of Sarawak's significant role in national investments and that Sarawak is poised to realise the country's vision of becoming a high-value regional clean energy leader," he said on Friday (Aug 1). Libat said the energy hubs were expected to create new high-value jobs for Sarawakians. "We hope the Dayak business community will actively look for and participate in business opportunities generated by new industries from these energy hubs," he said. As an indigenous business chamber, DCCI also supported the strengthening of socioeconomic development for Sarawak's bumiputra community under the 13MP. This includes expanding business opportunities through the provision of commercial premises, access to financing, entrepreneurship training and mentoring programmes to Sarawak bumiputra entrepreneurs. "In this connection, we urge the government to ensure that access to these business opportunities reaches the targeted group and benefits them. 'A multi-faceted approach involving government initiatives, dedicated programmes and structural support is crucial," Libat said. He proposed the implementation of outreach strategies to identify and engage potential bumiputra entrepreneurs, particularly in Sarawak's rural areas, as well as monitoring and evaluation of programmes to benefit them. "Skills training programmes for rural communities must be intensified so that economic growth can be shared inclusively," he added. Libat also said the 13MP's focus on basic infrastructure such as roads, water supply, electricity and digitalisation initiatives was timely and much needed to balance development between urban and rural areas. "Improved road connectivity is a game-changer for rural development in Sarawak, promising substantial economic and social benefits," he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store