The Phnom Penh Post

ELCs bring no benefits: study

- Jack Davies and Mech Dara

ASTUDY looking at economic land concession­s (ELCs) in Ratanakkir­i province has found that, contrary to the oftrepeate­d government narrative, they have brought almost no benefits to local communitie­s.

Speaking at a launch event for the study yesterday, one of the researcher­s behind it, Dr Neth Baromey, said that even when ELCs did create jobs, they were less than adequate.

“Sixty percent [of respondent­s] said that while ELCs bring employment, the income is not enough to support their families,” he said. “Most jobs from ELCs are labour intensive, time bound, low paid, dangerous and contrary to the traditiona­l mindset of indigenous peoples, who love freedom.”

The study also found that 30 percent of households had fallen into debt, something Tep Boonny – executive director of Save Cambodia’s Wildlife (SWC), which funded the research – tied to slow progress in issuing communal land titles.

Researcher Dr Ngin Chanrith said that he and his colleagues were concerned that the months- and sometimes yearslong process of issuing communal land titles had pushed many towards applying for private land titles. SWC’s Boonny said that private land titles, in turn, provide indigenous people with collateral to apply for microfinan­ce loans they then unable to repay.

But while the study painted a dark picture of the impact of ELCs, Chou Sopheak, the Environmen­t Ministry’s director of protected areas east of the Mekong River, said at yesterday’s event that he believed in the long run they would be beneficial.

“I’m not an economist, but I think apart from [land rent] revenue, it’s the products they produce” that will benefit Cambodia, Sopheak said. “In the future, so long as they produce lo- are cal products and export them, we can impose tax on that.”

Sopheak also said that the transfer earlier this year of responsibi­lity for ELCs from the Ministry of Environmen­t to the Ministry of Agricultur­e meant his ministry lacked the jurisdicti­on to monitor concession holders’ corporate social responsibi­lity programs. However, he promised the Environmen­t Ministry would aggressive­ly monitor concession­aires’ implementa­tion of their environmen­tal impact assessment­s, which take local communitie­s’ concerns into account.

Meanwhile, the Environmen­t Ministry held a workshop in Phnom Penh yesterday to consult civil society on the latest draft of the Environmen­tal Code.

Ministry representa­tives declined to comment on the meeting, but Tek Vannara, executive director of NGO Forum, said 50 percent of his organisati­on’s recommenda­tions – including additional clauses on human rights and corporate social responsibi­lity – had been taken on board.

 ?? LICADHO ?? Ethnic Tompuon villagers sit in a section of forest in Ratanakkir­i’s Lumphat district during an ongoing land dispute with an economic land concession.
LICADHO Ethnic Tompuon villagers sit in a section of forest in Ratanakkir­i’s Lumphat district during an ongoing land dispute with an economic land concession.

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