The Phnom Penh Post

Compost site set for Siem Reap district

- Long Kimmarita

BY UTILISING organic waste to produce compost for farmers, Sotr Nikum district authoritie­s in Siem Reap province hope to improve both the local economy and waste management.

A compost processing facility that will use earthworms to turn organic waste into premium fertiliser is being constructe­d in the district, following the signing of a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) between the NGO GRET Cambodia and ISD – a programme co-funded by Germany’s developmen­t agency GIZ and designed to help local authoritie­s deliver highqualit­y services to citizens.

By sorting useful organic waste into compost, GRET Cambodia believed that the district will vastly improve the sustainabi­lity of its waste management.

“This project will boost the income of the local agricultur­al economy, while also reducing greenhouse gas emissions and the total amount of waste that goes into landfills,” said a GRET press release.

GRET project manager Touch Sokharith told The Post on March 27 that the MoU was the first step towards working with local farmers and district authoritie­s to start enhancing local garbage management. He estimated that it would take roughly a month before the compost manufactur­ing procedure could be tested, as the structure that would hold the facility was still under constructi­on.

“We are currently working to complete the facility, and expect it to be completed

towards the end of April. As soon as it is ready, we will introduce the earthworms and begin working with the local garbage collection contractor­s to establish the necessary procedures,” he said.

Thai Soda, deputy president of the Sotr Nikum Natural Safety Plantation Community – made up of almost 70 families who farm organicall­y – told The Post that she hoped the project will be successful.

“It would be fantastic if we could source high-quality local compost. Currently, we make as much compost as we can, and use dung from our animals, but the wider community uses imported chemical fertiliser­s,” she said.

“Going forward, it will help the environmen­t in general. On a more personal note, I would be pleased if more of the district’s farmers had a better alternativ­e to imported chemicals. It will also

promote the clean, green image of the region,” she added.

Heng Kunvuthy, director of the Agricultur­e and Natural Resources Office of the Sotr Nikum district authority, said garbage would eventually be collected and sorted from each of the markets throughout the district, but one commune had been selected for the testing phase.

“The first waste sorting activities will take place with the garbage collected from the markets in Dam Daek commune. We will instruct market vendors to sort their waste correctly. If all goes well, the community will see many benefits, and I hope the vendors contribute to its success,” she added.

Kunvuthy is a firm believer in the project. “Organic compost that is locally produced from local waste is a win-win for the community,” she said.

 ?? GRET ?? GRET and ISD representa­tive exchange the MoU in Siem Reap’s Sotr Nikum district on March 23.
GRET GRET and ISD representa­tive exchange the MoU in Siem Reap’s Sotr Nikum district on March 23.

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