The Phnom Penh Post

MRC stations not operationa­l

- Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon and Rinith Taing

LESS than half of the monitoring stations set up by the Mekong River Commission in Cambodia are not operationa­l due to a lack of financial commitment from the Cambodian government, officials said yesterday, jeopardisi­ng the collection of important environmen­tal and hydrologic­al data.

Though the stations were set up by the MRC, each Mekong country – Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand and Laos – is responsibl­e for stations within their borders that collect a host of invaluable real-time data on hydrology, pollution and fisheries. The data is used, among other things, for forecastin­g and monitoring floods and droughts.

Currently, however, only five of Cambodia’s 12 stations are operationa­l, the MRC confirmed, with the other Mekong countries also facing significan­t outages.

“It’s very sad to say . . . there were millions of dollars that were invested, and they were working, and then they were decentrali­sed, and unfortunat­ely at this moment in time only 15 out of 45 are working” across the region, MRC CEO Pham Tuan Phan said at a conference on resilient infrastruc­ture in Phnom Penh.

What’s more, he added, those that remain functional are only working intermitte­ntly, limiting the amount of important data they are able to collect.

Tuan Phan said the informatio­n came to him in a report he received last month, and that the reason so few stations are operating is that countries have failed to allocate maintenanc­e funding.

“And probably, also, member countries do not appreciate or do not focus on their ownership of those stations,” he added. “All the stations in Laos do not work.”

Reached for comment, Yin Savuth, the head of the Department of Hydrology and River Works at the Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorolog­y, blamed broken machinery and a lack of technical experts, as well as budget constraint­s. The five that are running, he said, are not automated, meaning the ministry does not need specialise­d technician­s to maintain them.

“Those stations used to be run on MRC budget, which expired in 2012,” he said.

“The Ministry does not have the budget to run all of them,” he added, noting that “less than a million dollars” would be needed.

Tuan Phan, however, said maintenanc­e costs were practicall­y “nothing”, just around $80,000 per year.

“Yeah [it’s] nothing; that’s why I’m mad,” Tuan Phan said.

Currently, he said, the MRC is seeking to re-open the defunct stations as soon as possible and seek financing for the work later.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? A sunset view across Cambodia’s Mekong River last year.
HENG CHIVOAN A sunset view across Cambodia’s Mekong River last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia