The Phnom Penh Post

Nov iron, steel imports down 15% on-month

- Hin Pisei

CAMBODIAN “iron and steel” imports in the first 11 months of 2022 clocked in at $327.412 million, rising by 22.6 per cent year-on-year from $267.156 million, according to Customs.

This category of items, correspond­ing to Chapter 72 of the harmonised tariff schedule, accounted for 1.180 per cent of the $27.747 billion value of the Kingdom’s total imports over the 11 months, General Department of Customs and Excise (GDCE) statistics show.

Last month alone, the Kingdom imported $25.544 millions worth, up 15.8 per cent from $22.067 million in November 2021, but down 15.1 per cent from $30.090 million in October 2022.

The GDCE did not reveal any tonnage figures. To clarify, these imports do not include “articles of iron or steel”, which instead fall under Chapter 73 of the tariff schedule.

Housing Developmen­t Associatio­n of Cambodia (HDAC) secretary-general Huy Vanna told The Post that despite remarkable improvemen­ts in the Covid-19 situation, virtually no constructi­on work is happening at the more recently approved projects, and many developmen­ts remain abandoned – especially in Sihanoukvi­lle – indicating little if any tangible signs of an overall revival of the sector.

“I’ve yet to see a pick-up in constructi­on activities on new projects, even taking into account the housing developmen­ts owned by local investors,” he said.

Vanna expects solid rebounds in the sector as well as in imports of constructi­on materials, as global economic growth returns to a more moderate pace, and as tourism and general investment flows increase.

He credited the on-year rise in the value of iron and steel imports to elevated prices for the materials, adding that the bulk used for constructi­on in Cambodia is shipped in from Vietnam, China and Thailand.

For reference, Trading Economics data shows that, last year, Cambodia imported “iron and steel” worth a total of $292.34 million, of which $124.4 million was from Vietnam, $134.04 million from China, and $6.41 million from Thailand.

Global Real Estate Associatio­n president Sam Soknoeun predicted that the slowdown in the real estate and constructi­on sector will extend into 2023 due to Covid-19 uncertaint­y and geopolitic­al tensions between global powers, which have been underminin­g investment, especially in long-term and capitalint­ensive

ventures.

“The current slump in the real estate and constructi­on markets is happening in every country in the world, and recovery won’t be as quick as in some sectors,” he said.

Still, the prospect of steelmakin­g in Cambodia to keep imports down and capitalise on burgeoning domestic demand

has piqued the interest of many investors, such as the Chinese-owned Hong De Sheng (Cambodia) Steel Co Ltd, whose $16.7 million steelworks in Kampong Speu province opened in early December 2020. In its initial stage, the factory was said to have an annual production capacity of 500,000 tonnes.

In January-November 2022, 3,827 constructi­on projects were approved nationwide, with total registered capital of $2.635 billion – down by 98 developmen­ts and 49.42 per cent in terms of value compared to the same time last year, according to the Ministry of Land Management, Urban Planning and Constructi­on.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? A worker stands near a pile of rebars at a constructi­on site in the capital’s Chamkarmon district early this month.
HENG CHIVOAN A worker stands near a pile of rebars at a constructi­on site in the capital’s Chamkarmon district early this month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia