The Phnom Penh Post

Rice exports show slow growth

Japanese firms sign power line agreement

- Hor Kimsay Matthieu de Gaudemar

CAMBODIAN rice exports declined dramatical­ly in March, causing the average export growth of the Kingdom’s dominant cash crop to increase by only 3 percent during the first quarter of this year, nearly wiping out the double-digit growth seen in January and February.

According to rice export data released by the Ministry of Agricultur­e yesterday, Cambodia exported a total of 166,678 tonnes in the first quarter this year, up from 162,220 tonnes during the same period last year. While growth in January and February accelerate­d greatly by 11 percent and 17 percent respective­ly, the weighted average was bogged down by a 16 percent year-on-year decline for March exports.

Hun Lak, vice president of the Cambodia Rice Federation (CRF), said yesterday that the March declines can be attributed to stricter sanitary and phytosanit­ary (SPS) standards being imposed on shipments to China, Cambodia’s second largest market after the European Union. He added that only 26 Cambodian millers have been granted official approval to export to China with another 55 waiting to be vetted by China’s General Administra­tion of Quality Supervisio­n, Inspection and Quarantine.

“A large amount of the millers that used to export to China in the past are no longer able to export there now,” he said. “If the issue over SPS standards cannot be resolved soon, our export figures will continue to decline and this year will not be good.”

According to Lak, despite CRF lobbying Cambodian authoritie­s to fast-track negotiatio­ns with China to allow increased market access, the body has yet to produce tangible results for its members.

CRF has previously warned that the Cambodian rice industry could soon collapse unless millers diversify and tap into increasing­ly narrow and strict global markets.

In addition to the hurdles of entering the Chinese market, Cambodian millers are also concerned about the EU’s call to eradicate the use of the fungicide Tricyclazo­le in rice production. The EU has given farmers until June to meet the revised threshold levels on white rice – 0.01 milligrams of Tricyclazo­le residue per kilo of rice and December for fragrant rice.

In the first quarter of this year, Cambodia exported 84,059 tonnes of rice to the EU while exports to China accounted for nearly 40 percent of total exports at 67,482 tonnes.

Song Saran, CEO of Amru Rice, one of the country’s biggest exporters, raised similar concerns about Chinese market access but noted that the Ministry of Commerce (MoC) preemptive­ly submitted a list of only 18 millers, instead of the allotted 26, to China for the current harvest season.

He added that while Amru used to export 7,000 to 8,000 tonnes of rice to China annually in the past, it has yet to be included by the MoC for Chinese clearance.

“Now, we are trying to get into the Chinese market to accelerate our rice exports,” he said, adding that reliance on the EU market had reached a saturation point at about 300,000 tonnes exported annually.

“First, we need to send the full list of all 26 companies that have satisfied China’s SPS standards to them so that they will accept our exports,” Saran said.

“Second, we need to negotiate with China to allow more companies to export like they were before.”

Yang Saing Komar, founder of agricultur­al organisati­on CEDAC, said that new market access was the main challenge for the sector after it had been devastated last year by a prolonged drought.

“The weather is better than last year as there is a lot more rain which will provide higher yields of rice paddy to be milled,” he said.

“Paddy production is not the problem to boost exports. The high cost of processing, increased regional competitio­n and greater market access continue to be the industry’s main challenges.” T.T. Network Infrastruc­ture Japan, a joint venture between global electronic­s manufactur­er Toshiba and Tokyo Electric Power Co Holdings ( TEPCO), will operate and maintain 130 kilometres of a 230-kilovolt power transmissi­on line in Cambodia, according to Japanese media yesterday.

The report said that the Japanese joint venture signed the agreement, valued at $14.7 million, with an unnamed Malaysian company. The deal signed by T.T. Network Infrastruc­ture Japan also includes maintenanc­e of two substation­s and training of workers for a duration of 25 years.

While details about the Malaysian company were not announced, The Post reported earlier this month that Malaysian-owned power infrastruc­ture provider Pestech (Cambodia) Ltd was awarded a $100 million contract to build a 220kilomet­re, 230-kilovolt transmissi­on line connecting the Stung Tatai hydropower dam in Koh Kong province to Phnom Penh.

Pestech itself received the contract from the locally owned Alex Corporatio­n – the original firm contracted by the Cambodian government to build the transmissi­on line.

Japanese energy firms have recently increased their presence in Cambodia and last February a fully owned Toshiba subsidiary, Toshiba Plant Systems and Services Corporatio­n, received a contract to build a turnkey 150-megawatt coal-fired power plant for Cambodian Energy II Co Ltd in the coastal province of Preah Sihanouk.

Mey Kalyan, senior adviser at the Supreme National Economic Council, said it was a positive sign that major Japanese energy firms continued to show an interest in Cambodia. He added that the new transmissi­on lines provided another step towards solving the country’s continuing energy problems.

“I’m pleased to see that topclass companies are coming into the country,” he said.

“I hope that energy conditions will continue to improve so that Cambodia can increase investment­s to the country and improve manufactur­ing.”

Japanese media reported that T.T. Network Infrastruc­ture was looking to increase revenue by expanding to new markets following its heavy losses and rising costs related to the cleanup of the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster in 2011.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? A woman harvests rice in a paddy field in Phnom Penh’s Dangkor district late last year.
HENG CHIVOAN A woman harvests rice in a paddy field in Phnom Penh’s Dangkor district late last year.
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