Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen arrives at the National Assembly in Phnom Penh October 30, 2015. REUTERS/Samrang Pring |
Cambodia PM stands by hydropower, dismisses critics as 'extremists'
Yahoo News / Reuters | 23 December 2015
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - Cambodia's prime minister defended his
government's energy policy on Wednesday and hit back at
environmentalists opposed to hydropower plants by suggesting their
electricity be cut off and they should use resin torches instead.
Cambodia depends heavily on imported
fuel and power to meet its rising energy demand, with costs per unit
among the most expensive in Southeast Asia and a common source of
complaint from foreign investors.
Construction of
Chinese-funded hydropower projects, which first started a decade ago in
Cambodia, have raised alarm about the impact on endangered species, fish
stocks and the communities that live off the rivers.
Inaugurating a $540 million, 246-megawatt hydropower dam in Koh Kong
province on Wednesday, Prime Minister Hun Sen acknowledged some of the
concerns, like flooding of forested land, but said Cambodia had no
choice.
"We have to pay the price," Hun Sen said in a speech, adding the government was seeking more Chinese loans to expand power grids.
Cambodia plans to build 14 hydro dams
to be operational by 2020. An environmental group, NGO Forum on
Cambodia, in a report said those already built had caused deforestation
and hit water resources such as fisheries.
Hun Sen
said six of seven hydro dams built so far were operational and were
benefiting tens of thousands of households.
He dismissed critics as "extremists" who were opposed to anything.
"We can make resin torches for environmental extremists to use and cut off electricity from their homes," he said.
Russia and Cambodia signed an energy cooperation agreement
last month during a visit by Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev in
which Moscow will provide expertise, research and training on nuclear
power.
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