[PHNOM PENH POST]
Cambodia has plenty of potential to become a large rice exporter, and
should consider measures such as a free trade area on its borders to
boost trade, according to a Thai official.
Speaking at a Phnom
Penh meeting with members of the Thailand Rice Exporters’ Association,
Niyom Wairatpanij, vice chairman of Thailand’s Board of Trade, urged the
Kingdom to overcome its obstacles to increase rice exports.
“I
think Cambodia has a lot of potential to become a [major] rice exporter
in the near future,” he said. “But in the meantime, I think you still
lack infrastructure, and electricity and logistics costs are very high
compared to Thailand.”
Those costs are “more than double,” Niyom Wairatpanij said.
Minister
of Commerce Cham Prasidh said the country was working on these issues,
pointing to work on railway to better connect the Kingdom with Thailand
and neighbouring countries.
He also said the lack of quota
limitations and duty-free status Cambodia enjoys in the European Union
makes processing and exporting rice from here “much more attractive.”
Niyom
Wairatpanij also urged Cambodia to set up a free-trade zone at the
border to allow for a free flow of goods between the countries, but
Commerce Minister Cham Prasidh rejected the idea, saying the recent
border clashes would make that difficult.
Korbsook Ian Suri,
president of the Thai Rice Exporters’ Association, said that after a few
days touring Cambodia and meeting rice millers and government
officials, she did see opportunities for future investment.
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