The Phnom Penh Post

JICA to aid impact studies

- Martin de Bourmont

THE Ministry of the Environmen­t signed an agreement yesterday afternoon with the Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency ( JICA) in an effort to improve the Ministry of the Environmen­t’s capacity to curb pollution and review environmen­tal impact assessment­s (EIAs) for developmen­t projects.

“[ JICA] will deploy advisers and discuss with officers here to design training programs and review the legal framework necessary to regulate pollution in Cambodia,” ministry spokesman Sao Sopheap said, adding that the agreement will last three and a half years.

JICA yesterday declined to comment.

According to Sokharavut­h Pak, deputy director general of the ministry’s General Directorat­e of Environmen­tal Protection, JICA advisers will arrive in Cambodia this summer to begin training ministry officials.

Pak told The Post that individual JICA advisers will be placed in various department­s of the MoE in which they will work closely with MoE officials who will “learn by doing”. JICA advisers, said Pak, will remain for four- to six-month periods.

Enhancing the process by which the Ministry of the Environmen­t reviews EIAs will be a major component of the agreement. “Implementa­tion has been smooth so far; we have guidelines, but JICA would like to improve and review our guidelines,” said Pak. In conjunctio­n with this process, said Pak: “They will do a review with our team of our environmen­tal regulation­s.”

But despite Pak’s insistence that its EIA regime has been “smooth”, the ministry’s process for reviewing EIAs has repeatedly come under scrutiny from independen­t experts and NGOs for being an insufficie­nt barrier to environmen­tally harmful developmen­t projects.

These concerns persist, despite the new agreement.

“It could certainly be potentiall­y useful for JICA to provide technical support to the MoE to improve their effectiven­ess in conducting EIAs,” said Ian Baird, a professor at the University of Wisconsin Madison and an expert on the impact of dams in Southeast Asia.

“In most cases, private companies hire their own consultant­s to conduct EIAs, which frequently results in findings that make the projects look favourable,” said Baird. “In such cases, the role of government, including the MoE, in reviewing those privately conducted EIAs … is crucial.”

“[If ] the support provided to the MoE by JICA can help make that possible, then that is likely to be a good thing”, he added.

However, Baird concluded, “the biggest challenge will be to ensure that there is a political environmen­t that allows for transparen­cy and open debate about projects”.

 ?? PHAK SEANGLY ?? JICA will be consulting the Environmen­t Ministry on how to better assess the impacts of large-scale developmen­t projects like the Lower Sesan II dam, seen above during 2014 constructi­on.
PHAK SEANGLY JICA will be consulting the Environmen­t Ministry on how to better assess the impacts of large-scale developmen­t projects like the Lower Sesan II dam, seen above during 2014 constructi­on.

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