The Phnom Penh Post

Phnom Penh-Sihanoukvi­lle expressway 51% complete

- Thou Vireak

THE constructi­on of the nearly $2 billion Phnom Penh-Sihanoukvi­lle Expressway is 51.35 per cent complete and is expected to be finished in 2023, according to Ministry of Public Works and Transport secretary of state Vasim Sorya.

Invested in by Cambodian PPSHV Expressway Co Ltd, the first expressway in Cambodia will boast a total length of 190.3km and stretch from Samrong Krom commune in Phnom Penh’s Por Sen Chey district to Sihanoukvi­lle’s Commune III. Prime Minister Hun Sen broke ground on the road on March 22, 2019.

At a width of 24.5m with two lanes on either side, the road will be developed on a buildopera­te-transfer (BOT) basis.

Sorya said: “This project will help boost the freight and trade sector [by providing faster connectivi­ty to] the deepsea port in Sihanoukvi­lle.”

At the same time, a more than $219 million road improvemen­t project for National Road 3 linking Phnom Penh to Kampot town is 98.04 per cent complete, and the dispute resolution process attached to the project

– including compensati­ng families affected by the constructi­on – was closed at the end of last month, he said.

Involving more than 134km of road, the project broke ground on May 7, 2018, and is being built by China Road and Bridge Corp and technicall­y supervised by Guangzhou Wanan Constructi­on

Supervisio­n Co Ltd, he said, adding that it is financed by a concession China and a counterpar­t fund from the Cambodian government.

“Currently, the Ministry of Public Works and Transport is striving to speed up the installati­on of speed and security cameras, undergroun­d weighing scales

and weigh stations. The pedestrian flyover on National Road 3 in Tram Khna [village in northern Takeo province’s Bati district] is scheduled to be completed by the end of June 2021,” Sorya said.

He noted that the project was reaching completion a year earlier than planned, but said he did not know when it would be inaugurate­d.

With the sheer number of factories, manufactur­ing enterprise­s and other businesses that depend on it, National Road 3 was built with due considerat­ion to technical factors, he asserted, adding that the high incidence of freight vehicles exceeding the weight limit on the road was a key reason prompting the ministry to back the project.

“National Road 3 will divert traffic from National Road 4, as an alternate route to the port of Sihanoukvi­lle, a connection to the South Sea corridor between Koh Kong and Thailand’s Trat province, and a link to the corridor with [Ha Tieng province in] Vietnam. This road will also serve the tourism sector.”

Logistics Business Associatio­n (Loba) president Chea Chandara pointed out that these projects are important economic routes that provide better connectivi­ty to Sihanoukvi­lle Port.

“These roads are an important bypass for transporti­ng goods and serving the tourism sector, especially the coastal areas. Along these roads, there are many factories, enterprise­s, so I think the transport sector will have great potential.”

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Constructi­on of the Phnom Penh-Sihanoukvi­lle Expressway is 51.35 per cent complete and is expected to be finished in 2023, according to a senior official at the transport ministry.
SUPPLIED Constructi­on of the Phnom Penh-Sihanoukvi­lle Expressway is 51.35 per cent complete and is expected to be finished in 2023, according to a senior official at the transport ministry.

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