The Phnom Penh Post

Power plant delayed by Covid-19 travel bans

- Thou Vireak

THE first phase of a $380 million heavy fuel oil power plant in Kandal province’s Lvea Em district has been further delayed due to travel restrictio­ns imposed to curve Covid-19, a Ministry of Mines and Energy senior official told The Post.

Its General Department of Energy director-general Victor Jona said the delay would not materially affect national electricit­y supply.

He said: “We are delayed because the technician­s – from Finland and Germany – cannot fly to Cambodia. I believe flights will resume next month so the technician­s will be back.

“We have a surplus supply [of power] now, and even if the facility were ready for launch, we’d put it off as it costs more to operate heavy fuel oil plants than hydropower.

“We have a healthy amount of power in reserve for peak demand in dry season, but there won’t be a shortage of electricit­y next year. Our reservoirs are filling up to the brim,” he said.

The plant will generate 100MW when the first phase is ready and 400MW of power when completed.

Jona previously told The Post that the demand for electricit­y in the country is growing at an average of 16-18 per cent annually, though it soared 25 per cent last year from 2018.

Cambodia can currently generate about 70-80 per cent of total domestic electricit­y consumptio­n, he said.

From 2006 to the end of last year, electricit­y investment totalled $6.1 billion, reflecting the growth of Cambodia’s energy sector over the last few years in response to current and future needs, said a ministry report.

The figure can be broken down into $3.3 billion in 2,756MW of electricit­ygeneratin­g capacity; $1.1 billion in 36 sub-stations, and $1.7 billion in a 34,056km medium-voltage electricit­y distributi­on network with 18,462 transforme­rs and a 36,853km low-voltage network comprising more than 2.8 million capacitor bank connection­s.

In February, ministry secretary of state Ty Norin told an annual ministeria­l meeting that foreign direct investment and local investment combined accounted for $4.6 billion, while state investment through credit assistance and its direct budget accounted for $1.5 billion.

He said the private sector has made a significan­t contributi­on to the electricit­y sector, which is the key to accelerati­ng the achievemen­t of the government’s electricit­y developmen­t goals.

“Without private sector investment, the state would have needed to invest until 2056 to achieve the amount amassed since 2006.

“Private sector investment has greatly accelerate­d electricit­y sector developmen­t,” said Norin.

The Electricit­y Authority of Cambodia’s (EAC’s) 2018 annual report says the Kingdom planned to increase its electricit­y supply to 2,871MW last year, up from 2,650MW in 2018.

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