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Cambodia's biggest hydropower dams serious threats to people

By Supalak G Khundee, The Nation (Thailand). 28 January 2008.
http://nationmultimedia.com/2008/01/28/regional/regional_30063685.php

The construction of Cambodia's first and second biggest hydropower
dams pose serious threats to eco-systems and the livelihood of
thousands people in southwest of the country, an environmental
conservationist report said Monday.

Under an aid package of $600 million(Bt18.6 billion) from China,
Cambodia is constructing the Kamchay Dam with an installed capacity of
180 Megawatts (MW) the biggest in Cambodia in the southwestern
Kampot Province and the 120 MW Stung Atay Dam in Pursat Province.

The Kamchay Dam developed by China's largest hydropower developer,
Sinohydro Corporation, is located wholly within the Bokor National
Park and will flood 2,000 hectares of protected forest, according to a
research report by the US-based conservationist International Rivers.

The project, to be completed by 2010, denied access to nontimber
forest products to local residents, for whom many is an important
source of income, and potentially a negative impact on a local tourist
resort downstream of the dam, it said.

The Stung Atay, constructed by Yunnan Corporation for International
Techno Economic cooperation, will be completed by 2012. The dam will
flood a substantial area of the Central Cardamom Protect Forest, the
report said.

"Cambodia's free flowing rivers and abundant natural resources are
invaluable assets, the health of which are vital to the wellbeing of
Cambodia's rural population," said Carl Middleton, Mekong Program
Coordinator with International Rivers.

"Poorly conceived hydropower development could irreparably damage
these resources and undermine Cambodia's sustainable development."

At present, only 20 percent of households in Cambodia have access to
electricity. It is expected that the soaring demand for electricity
will increase to more than 900 from the 212 MW in 2002.

The government has many hydropower projects under feasibility study,
including the Sambor Dam to be built in the mainstream of the Mekong
River in Kratie Province with a capacity of 465 or 3500 MW depending
on the design and size of the reservoir.

The Sambor Dam, if built, would block major fish migrations and could
decimate the income of tens of thousands of subsistence and commercial
fishers. The dam also threatens the habitat for the endangered
Irrawaddy Dolphin, around which a thriving local tourism industry has
grown.

The Ministry of Industry, Mine and Energy estimated the country has
the potential to generate approximately 10,000 M, of which more than
50 percent will come from the Mekong mainstream.

Cambodian Foreign Minister Hor Namhong told an investment conference
in Tokyo recently that his country has a great potential to generate
electricity supplies for the region. Apart from Laos, Cambodia could
be the "battery of Asia", he said.

The report recommends that Cambodia adopts international best
practices in electricity planning, including the findings of the World
Commission on Dams, which is widely recognised to be the international
standard for energy and water planning.

"Cambodia has many choices for meeting our electricity needs including
renewable and decentralised energy options that must be explored,"
said Ngy San, Deputy Executive Director with the NGO Forum on
Cambodia.

 
 

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