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On June 4, 2026 Fiji's environment ministry rejected a proposal from The Next Generation Holdings (TNG), backed by Australian entrepreneurs Ian Malouf and Rob Cromb, to build an energy‑from‑waste incinerator and private port on the Vuda coast north of Nadi.
The scheme would have imported non‑recyclable rubbish from across the Pacific and burned about 900,000 tonnes a year, with promoters saying it could supply up to 40% of Fiji's electricity.
The ministry said submitted materials failed to address the scale of the project, imported waste handling, hazardous ash disposal, public‑health risks, and the economic case.
An environmental impact statement lodged by the company indicated Fiji's national emissions could rise by about 25%. Traditional landowners and tourism operators called the plan "waste colonialism," and Fiji's UN ambassador warned the Vuda coast "must not become the Pacific's ashtray." TNG had no immediate comment; proponents include the founder of Dial-a-Dump and the owner of the Kookai fashion label.
The proposal's proximity—about 15km—to Nadi's tourist gateway was a key concern.



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