The Phnom Penh Post

Bicycle makers need more local content to reach EU

- Kali Kotoski and Cheng Sokhorng

WITH the European Union looking increasing­ly like it will refuse Cambodia’s request to extend its exemption on local content requiremen­ts for the bicycle manufactur­ing industry beyond 2017, Commerce Ministry officials say investors can be expected to scale up local parts production to meet the content requiremen­ts.

Bicycles produced in the Kingdom can currently enter the EU duty-free due to derogation rules in place since 2014 that exempted Cambodian manufactur­ers from the minimum 30 percent local content required under the EU’s Generalise­d Scheme of Preference­s (GSP). This allowed companies to include parts from Malaysia and Singapore as local content under an EU quota of 400,000 bikes in 2014, 300,000 in 2015 and 150,000 in 2016.

However, the three-year exemption, aimed at giving Cambodia’s fledgling bicycle manufactur­ing industry time to mature and stabilise, is due to expire at the end of the year.

According to Bike-EU.com, a leading industry website, it is all but certain that the European Commission will ignore Cambodia’s request to renew the exemption for another three years.

Neverthele­ss, Khim Phally, a Commerce Ministry official assigned to the Manhattan Spe- cial Economic Zone in Bavet, the primary hub for the Kingdom’s bicycle manufactur­ers, said the expiry of the derogation rules would not break Cambodia’s industry. He said that while manufactur­ers have yet to set up dedicated production lines for bike components, plans were in the works to meet the 30 percent local content requiremen­t.

“While EU’s policy was designed to push us toward developing an industry that could compete internatio­nally, we will eventually gain from more from producing locally,” he said.

“Regardless if we lose the dutyfree access, I do not believe that our production or exports would be hurt as both the government and investors understand the benefits of making bicycles in Cambodia,” he said.

Heng Srunhy, manager of Fly- ing Bikes 2, a local high-end bike shop, said that from his own experience of inspecting production lines of factories operating in Bavet, “Cambodia has the capabiliti­es” to easily scale up production.

“Even if the EU restrictio­n demands that Cambodia stops importing some parts, it will not cause any trouble as many companies can set up factories quickly to make parts here,” he said. “Factories in Cambodia are already producing high-quality carbon-fibre bike frames.”

Cambodian-made bikes have become a top competitor in the European market in recent years, with 1.4 million bicycles exported to the EU in 2015, a 22-percent increase over the previous year. The Cambodian Special Economic Zone Board valued EU shipments for 2015 at $364 million.

 ?? ELI MEXLER ?? A Giant bikes store in central Phnom Penh in 2014.
ELI MEXLER A Giant bikes store in central Phnom Penh in 2014.

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