The Phnom Penh Post

Bonded warehouse opens its doors

- Matthieu de Gaudemar

LOCAL logistics firm Kerry Worldbridg­e officially launched its customs bonded warehouse yesterday, allowing firms to import and store materials in the facility without paying duties and taxes provided the final product is re-exported.

Located just south of the capital, the warehouse is part of the first stage of the company’s special economic zone (SEZ) developmen­t, which is expected to be completed in three stages covering 63 hectares at a total cost of $100 million.

Sear Rithy, chairman of Kerry Worldbridg­e Logistics, said during the facility’s inaugurati­on that the company is expecting at least $300 million investment in the SEZ, though no official contracts have been signed yet. The company previously signed a memorandum of understand with German firm InSite Bavaria, to promote and attract high technology manufactur­ing to the SEZ.

“Our company strongly believes that this special economic zone and customs bonded warehouse will allow us to attract direct investment­s from foreign countries and increase their interest in investing in other fields in Cambodia,” Rithy said. “According to our projection­s, the flow of investment should be at least $300 million.”

Rithy said Kerry Worldbridg­e expects the SEZ will generate between 20,000 to 25,000 jobs once it is in full operation.

Charles Esterhoy, chief operations officer of the Kerry Worldbridg­e SEZ, said after the event that the underlying goal of the zone is to attract high-level manufactur­ing, labelled as “Industry 4.0”. The company hopes to help Cambodia leapfrog stages of industrial evolutiona­ry chain by introducin­g the highest level of technologi­cal manufactur- ing capacity to the Kingdom.

“We’ve all heard that 30 percent of garment jobs are going to be lost to robots [in Cambodia], that is the garment industry moving towards what is called Industry 3.0, which is automation,” he said.

“What we are doing is skipping Industry 3.0, and we will go straight to Industry 4.0, which is cyber-physical manufactur­ing, and is already in place in leading industrial nations like Japan or Germany.”

Esterhoy noted that in or- der for Cambodia to absorb such a high level of manufactur­ing, it will need to significan­tly improve the vocational skills of its workforce. He says Kerry Worldbridg­e’s MoU with InSite Bavaria includes providing training for workers while the firm also has an agreement with the National Polytechni­c Institute of Cambodia (NPIC) to increase vocational training.

“In order to attract investment from German, EU or Japanese high tech manufactur­ers, we have to change vocational skills levels,” he said.

“Cambodia is perfect for this because you have a relatively small and young population, and they understand technology.”

Figures from the Ministry of Economy and Finance showed that trade volume for SEZs in Cambodia grew by 1.2 percent last year, reaching 2.83 billion for both imports and exports.

George Yong Boon Yeo, president of the Kerry Group and CEO of Kerry Logistics, said that the new facilities and the customs bonded warehouse would satisfy a growing need for sophistica­ted logistics solutions in Cambodia.

“Kerry Logistics Network and our local partner Worldbridg­e Group . . . are working together to improve logistics in the Kingdom,” he said.

“This will help lower costs and make Cambodia an even more attractive country for investment.”

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Guests look at a model of the Kerry Worldbridg­e Special Economic Zone at its opening yesterday outside of Phnom Penh.
HENG CHIVOAN Guests look at a model of the Kerry Worldbridg­e Special Economic Zone at its opening yesterday outside of Phnom Penh.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia