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The Selangor water works provides water supply to the state of Selangor as well as the federal territories of Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya in Malaysia. The raw water is sourced mostly from surface water collected by several dams , lakes and rivers, and treated at the nearby water treatment plants .
Construction has been approved of the MYR993.89 million Langat 2 water treatment plant which was proposed to increase the state's output of treated water, alleviate pressure on other treatment plants, and provide an additional safety net in times of crisis. [7]
Batu Dam (Malay: Empangan Batu) is a dam in Gombak District, Selangor, Malaysia. The dam is a water supply dam with holding capacity of 30,199 ML. The Sungai Batu water treatment plant produces 114 ML per day of treated water. [1] [2]
Water privatisation in Kuala Lumpur and Selangor. In the federal capital territory of Kuala Lumpur and the state of Selangor, which completely surrounds the capital territory, a 26-year BOT contract for a 1,120 megaliter per day water treatment plant was signed with Puncak Niaga Holdings in 1994 as part of the Selangor River Water Supply Scheme ...
The dam's water storage capacity is 25,104 million liters. The Bukit Nanas water treatment plant takes raw water from this reservoir and produces 145 million liters of treated water per day. During the 2014 water crisis, capacity dropped as low as 54%, providing only approximately 80 days of water supply. [1]
Gamuda Berhad (MYX: 5398) is an engineering, property and infrastructure company based in Malaysia.It is one of the largest Malaysian infrastructure companies and has undertaken various projects, both locally and overseas, like the construction of Klang Valley MRT lines, highways, airport runways, railways, tunnels, water treatment plants, dams, infrastructure concessions and the development ...
Semenyih Dam (Malay: Empangan Semenyih) is a dam in Hulu Langat District, Selangor, Malaysia. Built in 1985, the dam, with its lake surrounded by green forested hills, provides one of the most breathtaking sights in the country. It also supplies a major portion of drinking water to the Klang Valley population.
On 20 December, the area of Kajang, Selangor, was also hit by serious floods. [7] By 23 December, most rivers in Kelantan, Pahang, Perak and Terengganu had reached dangerous levels. [8] Due to rising water levels, most businesses were affected and about 60,000 people were evacuated the following day.