By Simon Lewis - June 4, 2013
Cambodia’s reliance on imported fossil fuels to meet its energy needs
is set to increase in the coming years, despite the raft of hydropower
projects planned by the government, according to new data from the Asian
Development Bank (ADB).
Officials from the ADB last week presented an analysis at a workshop
in Phnom Penh, setting out “Asia’s energy challenge”—the task of meeting
the rising demand for energy in a resource-short but high-growth
region.
Using baseline figures from the Institute of Electrical Engineers of
Japan, the ADB predicted that Cambodia’s energy self-sufficiency would
decrease from more than 70 percent in 2010 to 52.2 percent by 2035.
In 2010, the equivalent energy of 5.21 megatons of oil was needed to
power Cambodia—including everything from automobiles to domestic
electricity supplies to cooking—according to the figures, which were
provided after the workshop by the ADB.
Some 71.5 percent of Cambodia’s energy needs in 2010 were provided by
“biomass and residues”—firewood and fuel left over from farming—and
28.4 percent was from imported oil, the figures say.
Just 0.1 percent came from hydropower, meaning that 71.6 percent of the energy demand was met with Cambodian-made energy.
But with growth and urbanization, the ADB predicts that the country’s
energy needs will more than double to 11.1 megatons of oil equivalent.
And while hydropower dams will by 2035 account for 86 percent of
domestically produced energy, this will only cover 9.9 percent of
Cambodia’s total energy needs.
Cambodia’s oil imports have been steadily increasing, rising by about
14 percent last year to 1.6 million tons, according to Commerce
Ministry figures.
Cambodia currently has two hydropower dams completed and four more
under construction—all funded and constructed by Chinese banks and
companies. Three coal power projects have also been announced.
Donghyun Park, principal economist at the ADB’s economics and
research department, who presented the report last week, said that it
should not necessarily be a target for countries to be energy
self-sufficient.
Mr. Park said in an email that while hydropower would likely play an
increasingly large role in providing energy in Cambodia, the need for
fossil fuels would outstrip supply from dams................
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