Eco groups slam Areng dam
Two major conservation groups yesterday said that the proposed
Stung Cheay Areng dam in Koh Kong province should be scrapped, while
protesters who have blocked developer Sinohydro Group from entering the
site for several days headed to Phnom Penh to voice their concerns and
discontent.
Conservation International (CI) and Flora and Fauna International
yesterday released separate statements to Sawac Consultants for
Development, a firm contracted by Sinohydro to carry out an
environmental impact assessment for the project.
“Based on the negative impacts . . . we recommend that the dam
project should not proceed in this ecologically sensitive area,” FFI
said in its report.
“As a result of the high impacts and low economic potential of the
Areng dam, CI advises both [Sawac] and the Ministry of Environment not
to approve the construction of a dam in the Areng Valley by Sinohydro or
any other company.”
In February, the previous concession holder for the project, China
Guodian, said in its annual report that it had backed out because the
dam made no financial sense.
Both of the groups outlined their objections to the project, which
ranged from possible breaches of the international Convention on
Biological Diversity, to which Cambodia is a signatory, to threats to
people and endangered wildlife caused by relocation and construction.
CI official Toby Eastoe said yesterday that if Sinohydro and the
government insist on the development, payments the firm is legally bound
to make for environmental protection should be transparent, adding that
a similar EIA conducted by Sawac had recommended such payments, but
none had materialised.
“The Atai dam has been operational since last June and only NGOs and
their donors have been supporting government protection,” he added.
Um Sereyvuth, director of the Sawac EIA team, said yesterday that Koh
Kong’s provincial governor had told them to wait before trying to
access the area again following a blockade of the road by locals.
“They say ‘not yet, not yet’, I don’t know if we can go soon. I have
written back to the Ministry of Environment telling them about the
problem,” he said.
While about 20 villagers continued yesterday to man the road into the
proposed dam site to block Sinohydro from bringing in drilling and
prospecting equipment, six ethnic Chorng representatives are due to
arrive in Phnom Penh today to petition the ministries of mines and
energy, environment and culture.
“We’ll not stop until we have an acceptable solution,” said Veng Vorn, one of the six.
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