The Phnom Penh Post

Chinese firm eyes steel mill

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large amounts of iron and steel have to be imported from overseas.”

Weng said Hangzhou Iron and Steel, a state enterprise with $10 billion in assets and over 50 yea rs’ ex perience in steel manufactur­e, was looki ng to ex pa nd it s busi ness over sea s a nd br i ng i n it s advanced technolog y.

“Right now, we’re looking out for deals and partners to sell our technology to Cambodia, and jointly build a steel mill,” he said.

“We can also invest in shares and participat­e in the establishm­ent of steel mills in Cambodia.”

He said the company was favouring a location near Phnom Penh, but admitted the project could face significan­t hurdles given Cambodia’s limited port resources and logistics networks.

“We believe that the demand for a steel mill will be very high in the future,” Weng said.

“We can’t confirm yet that a steel mill will be built here . . . but the reason we’re paying so much attention to Cambodia is because we feel it’s a place that’s worth looking for opportunit­ies for collaborat­ion.”

Cambodia imported over 265,000 tonnes of steel last year, mostly from Vietnam and China.

Hort Pheng, director of the industrial affairs department at the Ministry of Industry and Handicraft, said local steel pro- duction would benefit Cambodia in a number of ways.

“If we can produce steel here it would provide a lot of benefits as we can use our own raw materials,” he said.

“It would also generate national revenue, technical transfer and local jobs, and manufactur­e steel cheaper than the cost of import.”

Last month, a marketing executive at Sihanoukvi­lle Special Economic Zone (SSEZ) indicated that an unnamed Chinese steel company was in talks to set up a plant in the industrial park, providing up to 500 new jobs. It remains unclear whether this was the same firm, or another company.

In 2013, a Ph nom Pen hbased consortium of Chinese metals firms and China Railway Group inked a n agreement to build a 400-kilometre ra i l l i ne to connect a n i ron mine in Prea h Vihea r province to a proposed port and steel mill in Koh Rong province. However, the mysterious $11.2 billion project never got off the ground.

According to Pheng, several companies have submitted requests to Cambodian investment authoritie­s for permission to build steel mills or recycling plants. However, only Guangxi Nonferrous Metals Group (GNMG) has received a license to operate.

In 2012, GNMG announced plans to build a $500 million steel mill in Preah Vihear province, but the project soon stalled. The project was definitive­ly mothballed earlier this year when Chinese regulators ordered the insolvent stateowned enterprise to cease operations and liquidate its assets.

 ?? AFP ?? A worker at a steel mill in Hefei, eastern China, in 2010.
AFP A worker at a steel mill in Hefei, eastern China, in 2010.

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