By Kaing Menghun and Simon Henderson - June 18, 2013
National energy supplier Electricite du Cambodge (EdC) on Monday
announced that a 50-MW coal-fired power plant in Preah Sihanouk province
is ready to come online this week and will solve Phnom Penh’s chronic
blackouts.
In recent months, Phnom Penh, Kandal and Kompong Speu provinces have
experienced a continuous spate of power outages during hours of maximum
electricity usage due to hot weather and a lack of water in the
country’s few hydropower dams.
But from later this week, the new power plant will be a significant
step toward plugging the hole in the country’s energy supply, EdC
president Keo Ratanak said in a statement.
“Putting the 50-MW coal power plant in Preah Sihanouk province this
week will allow the EdC to supply the extra power to the whole of Phnom
Penh, making the major power cuts experienced so far no longer exist”
the statement says.
The statement does not mention which power plant had been completed,
though there are known to be two 50-MW power plants in the area—one a
Cambodian-Chinese company and the other a subsidiary of Malaysia-based
Leader Universal Holdings.
Cambodia still relies heavily on energy imported from neighboring
countries and in May, a massive power outage in Southern Vietnam knocked
out electricity and water across Phnom Penh for more than six hours.
EdC planning director Praing Chulasa said that Phnom Penh will still
need to import electricity from Vietnam—which accounts for about 70
percent of its supply—but said that the new plant will do away with the
seasonal shortages suffered by hydropower dams.
Despite the power plant coming online, energy experts say demand for
energy in the country will far outstrip supply in the coming years............ read more!
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