The Phnom Penh Post

China to study river water treatment

- Kim Yutharo

A CHINESE corporatio­n said it will send a team of engineerin­g specialist­s to Cambodia later this month to examine plans to build a new water treatment plant that will supply various eastern provinces. The proposed plant will use the

Mekong River as it source.

The plan follows the signing of a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) between the state-run China Civil Engineerin­g Constructi­on Corp (CCECC) and the Ministry of Industry, Science, Technology and Innovation in January.

CCECC vice-president Tony

Wong met with industry minister Cham Prasidh on April 3.

“Work is well underway, and proposal documents have been submitted to the Chinese leadership for approval. Chinese technician­s and other specialist­s will arrive at the end of April to conduct final assessment­s,” said Wong.

He added that procedures to approve the import of the specialist machinery that would be needed were already underway.

According to a ministry press release, Prasidh expressed his appreciati­on for the swiftness of the Chinese preparatio­ns, saying they expected the team to have completed final plans for the project by the end of May.

“He believed that it was very likely that the two countries would cooperate to build the treatment plant, as it will make a huge difference in the lives of the people in the eastern part of the Kingdom, by giving them access to clean water from the Mekong River Basin,” it said.

“If we implement this largescale project, we will help the people living along National Road 7, including in Kampong Cham, Tbong Khmum and Kraie provinces, where groundwate­r has been contaminat­ed with toxins and chemicals left over from the wars of the 1960s and 70s. The toxins that remain have a serious effect on animal and human health, for example in an over-representa­tion of birth defects. This is a social burden that we cannot bear,” added Prasidh.

 ?? MISTI ?? Industry minister Cham Prasidh (left) meets with Tony Wong, vice-president of China’s CCECC on April 3.
MISTI Industry minister Cham Prasidh (left) meets with Tony Wong, vice-president of China’s CCECC on April 3.

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