Forest City is an integrated residential development and private town located in Iskandar Puteri, Johor, Malaysia. It is located in the southwestern part of Johor Bahru District, the second largest district in Malaysia by population. First announced in 2006 as a twenty-year investment project mostly financed by a consortium of mainland Chinese private real estate developers, pitched under the Belt and Road Initiative.[2]
The development of Forest City is contentious. The project was not targeted at local Malaysians but rather at upper-middle-class citizens from China who were looking to park their wealth abroad, by offering relatively affordable seafront properties compared to expensive coastal cities within their country such as Shanghai.[5][6] However, initial strong sales from China collapsed after its leaderXi Jinping implemented currency controls, including a $50,000 annual cap on how much buyers could spend outside the country.[6][7] Such lackluster sales were exacerbated by the 2020–2022 Malaysian political crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic, with the project being described as a "ghost town" in 2022.[8][9] The project, which is located on reclaimed land, has also been criticised for causing large amounts of habitat destruction in the vicinity.[10]
History
On March 6, 2016, Forest City, developed by Country Garden Holdings, held its grand opening ceremony in Johor, Malaysia. The event was attended by the Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, who announced that Forest City would be designated as a duty-free zone.[11]
On July 16, 2018, the American school Shattuck-St. Mary's established a campus in Forest City, with student enrollment beginning in the fall of that year.[12] The school rebranded as Forest City International School in 2024.[13]
By June 2023, Forest City had a long-term residential population of between 8,000 and 9,000 people, far short of its projected population of 700,000.[14]
On August 25, 2023, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim declared that Forest City would be included within the Iskandar Malaysia Economic Zone as a Special Financial Zone to enhance its competitiveness.[15][16]
In July 2024, the Malaysian Parliament passed five bills designating Forest City Island 1 as a duty-free island. Further plans are in place to expand duty-free categories and apply for exemptions on consumption and import taxes.[17]
On September 20, 2024, the government announced incentives for Forest City Special Financial Zone (SFZ).[18]
Controversy
Environmental impact
Despite being marketed as "an energy-efficient, ecologically sensitive, land-conserving, low-polluting offshore city", the development has had significant negative environmental impact, with irreversible damage due to reclamation of ecologically sensitive coastal wetlands.[5][19]
The area within which Forest City lies is protected as an Environmentally Sensitive Area (ESA) Rank 1 area, where no development is allowed except for low-impact nature tourism, research and education.[20] Chief to this designation are two areas of international ecological significance, the Tanjung Kupang intertidal seagrass meadow, the largest of its kind in Malaysia, and the Pulai River Mangrove Forest Reserve, designated as a wetland of international importance under the Ramsar Convention.
Reclamation began in January 2014 without the legally required Detailed Environmental Impact Assessment (DEIA).[21][22] Residents from Kampung Tanjung Kupang, a traditional fishing village, complained of reduced catches and other issues to the local and Johor State authorities to no avail.[19][23][24]
Malaysia had also not informed Singapore as required under their 2005 International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea-mediated agreement on reclamation works and other treaties.[19][25][26] Singapore subsequently sent a diplomatic note in May 2014 to the Malaysian Federal government requesting clarification on issues including: potential changes in water current speeds and the subsequent impact on navigational safety; possible erosion that might affect shoreline and Malaysia-Singapore Second Link bridge infrastructure; and changes in water quality and morphology that might affect the coastal and marine environment and local fish farms. Following this and an accompanying outcry by international environmental watchdogs, the Environment Ministry sent a request for the DEIA to Country Garden on 6 June 2014, and issued a stop-work order on 17 June 2014, although it was reported that work continued despite the stop-work order.[20]
The DEIA was issued in January 2015, confirming that the regulations had been side-stepped and contained 81 directives, including a reduction in size from 1,600 hectares to less than 405 hectares. It acknowledged that the seagrass ecosystem had been split into two and "will be heavily impacted by the proposed development" despite these measures.[19][20][6][27] Country Garden subsequently announced that it was downsizing the project by a third and dividing it into four islands, although there was subsequent evidence that some of these measures were not implemented, including photographs where silt curtains were absent and of buffer zones that were less than 100m (as opposed to the agreed 300m).[21] Concerns also remained about the permanent impact on the seagrass, water hydrology, and loss of traditional fishing grounds, which these measures will not fully alleviate.[20]
Other environmental concerns include claims that sand from local hills was being used at the project site and fears of stress on local water sources and sewage discharge.[20]
Fishermen also reported the reduced space for fishing in the Johor Straits due to the land reclamation work had forced them further out into the sea, resulting in occasions where they were accused of crossing the international boundary line with Singapore. [28]
Safety considerations
Cracks began to appear in the Show Gallery, hotel buildings and roads soon after construction. There were claims that the speed of the land reclamation did not allow time for the soil to settle and stabilize, with a building consultant opining that the land was sinking, and would likely continue to do so.[20]
While Country Garden employed some locals, most of Forest City's workforce comprised low-wage labourers from South Asia or white-collar workers from China.[5]
Forest City has been described as one of the world's "most useless" megaprojects, and by the American magazine Foreign Policy as a "massive boondoggle".[34][35][5] By the end of 2019, only 15,000 units had been sold,[36] compared to a target of 700,000,[37] and as few as 500 people actually lived in the development.[5] There were multiple allegations of corruption at various levels and multiple stages of the project.[5][20][22] In addition, the residential units were priced according to the then-booming housing market in China, so local Malaysians were unable to afford them. Indicative of its clientele, the road signage was often exclusively written in Chinese while the few schools that opened only taught Mandarin.[38]
In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic led to increasing economic uncertainty and travel restrictions, severely affecting sales which dropped by more than 90% after March 2020.[36] Following implementation of Malaysia's Movement Control Order, some residents returned to their home countries. COVID-19 restrictions on travel between Malaysia and Singapore presented difficulties for the remaining residents, especially those working in or with children schooling in Singapore. Some tenants also suspended operations or pulled out, citing restrictions due to the Movement Control Order or commercial non-viability.[29][39] The developer subsequently laid-off at least two-thirds of its staff, after having sold less than ten properties in 18 months.[40]
In August 2023, the developer Country Garden joined the ranks of once-strong Chinese property developers in deferring millions of dollars in debt payments.[41][42] This was followed in October 2023 by cross defaults in up to $11 billion of offshore bonds, raising fears that overseas projects and assets such as Forest City would be sold or seized by creditors during the debt restructuring, such as had happened to Risland Australia in the weeks prior to the default.[43][44][45][46][47]
^Maloberti, Gregg (16 April 2020). "Covid-19 Update". Shattuck-St. Mary’s Forest City International School. Archived from the original on 12 April 2021. Retrieved 28 February 2021.