I figured the 30C space temp was a typo, my bad. If that factory envirnoment, and not the ambient outdoor air, is as hot and humid as relaxjack says then the MCC room is still below the dewpoint and you do not really want that air infiltrating in uncontrolled. Besides condensation there could be some corrosive elements (electrolytes)in the fertilzer factory air. The humid air will not mix right away and will contact surfaces below the dewpoint.
The crack method is quite tedious, I have gone through the ordeal twice.
2 Pa is a magical number. -2 Pa and you have humid air infiltrating in, touching a surface below the dewpoint and condensating. +2 Pa and you have reversed it. A good reference is ASHRAE's Humidity Control Design Guide written by the same guy who put a lot of work in on Munters manual. '-2 Pa is documented as creating millions of dollars of water damage in hotel/motel walls'
You will note that I mentioned it would be just enough fresh air to notice air leaving when a door was cracked.
Here because of climate,which is similar to Malaysia, it is very difficult to have a sealed vapour barrier on the 'warm side of the insulation' especially in the attic as you would have to be above the bottom of the truss cords, trying to seal around the webs. So with a trussed roof, it is not well sealed at the ceiling plane. 10% is a good starting point to pressurize the home and it will work out to less than that many times.
You start exceeding 10% outside air on standard equipment in a humid climate and the cooling process line rapidly becomes steep, ADP is out of range and the system will be overwhelmed with moisture that it cannot remove. You suddenly require an 8 to 10 row coil and reheat.
When you have the space pressurized, you have the infiltration controlled. There is no leakage by accident, outside of the system failing. If the building envelope is full of unsealed holes then there is no point pressurizing. Might as well put in a dedicated dehumidifier as well as a system to control space temperature.
Here is a photo of the reverse scenario, what a negative pressure ventilation scheme can cause with an ambient dewpoint of 80F. Air was infiltrating in at 300 FPM by the way. I like to refer to the photo as "It worked great in Arizona"
If it is truly a 30C temperature requirement then disregard what I have said. I am used to IT guys wanting it dry and below 70F even though the equipment can run at higher temperatures.