After nearly five years of working remotely, I wanted to find my way back to contributing locally in Sarawak.
I realised I had become a little out of touch with what was happening here.
If I want to contribute to Sarawak, I have to know Sarawak.
That search led me to PCDS 2030, Sarawak’s 10-year Post COVID-19 Development Strategy.
The scale of it caught my attention. But what stayed with me were the individual projects within it. Each one represents a part of Sarawak’s future, and each deserves to be seen.
I started building the independent PCDS 2030 Project Tracker to bring those projects into one place. It currently tracks 30 projects, with their public status, milestones and source links, so Sarawakians can more easily see what is being planned, built and completed.
Every project card includes the public reports, news and official announcements behind it. Those links are a defining feature. They let anyone check the evidence for themselves, while making the caveat clear: the tracker is only as accurate as the public information available.
But the tracker is also how I’m learning. Every project I research teaches me something new about Sarawak: our priorities, the people doing the work, the gaps in public information, and the scale of what is already underway.
I built it to learn, and I’m still learning.
If this helps more Sarawakians discover a project they didn’t know about, follow its progress, or become curious about where they might contribute, then the build is doing its job.
Explore it here: https://pcds2030.com