The Department of Environment has rejected the Environmental Impact Assessment Report for the proposed Energy-from-Waste Plant and Private Port Facility at Vuda Point, submitted by The Next Generation Holdings (Fiji) Pte Limited.
The Ministry says the review found that key issues remained unresolved, including the scale of the project, waste supply, imported waste, hazardous ash management, water supply, public health risks, environmental impacts, road and port infrastructure, social and cultural impacts, tourism impacts, and the overall economic case for the project.
Permanent Secretary for Environment and Climate Change, Doctor Sivendra Michael, says the decision was made based on the EIA Report and the information formally submitted for assessment.
The Ministry says the decision has been issued to the proponent following the technical review process under the Environment Management Act 2005 (as amended by the Environment Management (Amendment) Act 2025) and the Environment Management (EIA Process) Regulations 2007.
Doctor Michael says this is not a decision against investment or against new waste solutions.
He stresses it is a decision on whether the EIA Report met the legal and technical standards required for approval.
Doctor Michael says this report did not meet the required technical standards.
The Permanent Secretary says for a project of this scale, the Department must be satisfied that the risks to people, communities, the environment, culture, livelihoods and the economy are properly assessed and can be properly managed.
Doctor Michael says several critical matters remained unresolved and were proposed for future assessment rather than being addressed within the EIA itself.
As a result, the Department was not satisfied that the potential impacts and risks of the project could be adequately assessed or managed.
The Ministry acknowledges the significant public interest in the proposal and thanks the traditional landowners of Vuda, residents of Vuda and Saweni, government agencies, civil society organizations, technical experts, businesses and members of the public who participated in the review process.
The Ministry stresses that it remains committed to transparent, lawful and evidence-based environmental decision-making in the public interest.
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