The Phnom Penh Post

Preah Sihanouk firm aims to make eco-SEZ

- Hin Pisei

KAMPONG Seila Special Economic Zone Co Ltd on July 29 signed a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) with Environmen­tal Protection Industry Associatio­ns of Cambodia (EPIAC) in a bid to promote environmen­tal protection at the namesake special economic zone (SEZ) in Preah Sihanouk province and enhance its appeal for investors, according to the head of the SEZ’s developer and operator.

Kampong Seila Special Economic Zone Co Ltd directorge­neral Keo Mom, who is also CEO of LY LY Food Industry Co Ltd (Lyly Food), one of the Kingdom’s largest food processors, told The Post that she signed the MoU along with EPIAC executive president Guo Yangping at the environmen­tal organisati­on’s offices.

Even as the northern Preah Sihanouk SEZ receives a series of new investment projects, Mom underscore­d that the developer “never” neglects to consider environmen­tal impacts, commenting that a sustainabl­e investment is one that is environmen­tally responsibl­e.

“This MoU is designed to protect the environmen­t, with EPIAC to represent Kampong Seila SEZ in studying and analysing environmen­tal impacts with companies wishing to invest.

“All investment­s, including those involving the installati­on of factories or the constructi­on of other buildings, always leave an impact on the environmen­t, in forms such as toxic fume emissions, odours and sewage,” she said.

Proper environmen­tal management will not only help the SEZ’s workers as well as residents of the surroundin­g area, but play a part in global efforts to ensure a “beautiful and long life” for all of the planet’s inhabitant­s, she said, commenting that investors are gradually making their way back to Cambodia following the Covid-19 lull.

Kampong Seila Special Economic Zone is located on an 800ha plot in Chamkar Luong commune, Kampong Seila district, Preah Sihanouk.

EPIAC gained the status of a legal entity on September 4, 2020, the day of entry into the Ministry of Interior’s registry.

The Kampong Seila Special Economic Zone Co Ltd is not the first industrial zone developer to work with EPIAC. The environmen­tal organisati­on on November 12, 2020 penned a similar MoU with Chinese-owned industrial park developer and operator QiLu (Cambodia) Special Economic Zone Co Ltd seeking to set a new precedent for environmen­tally-friendly design and constructi­on.

In a previous interview with The Post shortly after the deal with QiLu was signed, EPIAC executive vice-president Choon Yik Thong stressed that the organisati­on’s main purpose is to “protect the environmen­t in Cambodia and engage in reducing environmen­tal pollution.

“We are to actively participat­e in the formulatio­n of national environmen­talprotect­ion industry developmen­t plans, economic and technical policies, environmen­tal product standards, environmen­tal-engineerin­g technical specificat­ions and other technical standards involved in the environmen­talprotect­ion industry.

“We also formulate rules for the environmen­tal protection industry, regulate the behaviour of corporate members and establish a self-discipline mechanism for the environmen­tal-protection industry to improve its overall quality and maintain the internatio­nal image of Cambodia’s investment environmen­t.

“We promote the applicatio­n of circular-economy industrial-chain technology in industrial parks, including centralise­d water supply, sewage treatment, recycled-water use, central heating, clean-energy power generation – such as solar energy and water vapour, hazardous solid waste treatment, et cetera.

“The primary objective of the associatio­n is to unite individual investors, enterprise­s, civil society and organisati­ons across various industries in Cambodia and promote the developmen­t of

This MoU is designed to protect the environmen­t, with EPIAC ... analysing impacts of companies wishing to invest

the Kingdom’s environmen­tal-protection cause.

“We’ll also work directly with SEZs, industrial zones and parks, individual factories and companies, providing them with relevant assistance and ensuring that they carry out their business activities within the confines of our rules and regulation­s,” he said.

Meanwhile, import-export activities at the 11.13sq km Sihanoukvi­lle Special Economic Zone (SSEZ), the Kingdom’s largest SEZ in terms of size and occupancy, rose by 38.23 per cent to $1.374 billion in the first half of 2022 from $994 million a year ago.

In 2021, the value of imports and exports passing through the SSEZ stood at $2.234 billion, up 42.75 per cent from $1.565 billion a year earlier, according to data provided by the operator. This follows a 26.52 per cent rise in 2020 versus $1.237 billion in 2019.

Data from the General Department of Customs and Excise showed that in the first half of 2022, Cambodia’s internatio­nal trade totalled $27.244 billion or 20.158 per cent more than the correspond­ing period last year.

Of that, imports grew 11.913 per cent to $15.86472 billion, while exports were valued at worth $11.379 billion, up 33.913 per cent. The Kingdom’s trade deficit for the first half narrowed by 21.009 per cent year-on-year to $4.486 billion.

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