[PHNOM PENH POST] 
The Cambodian government has released its first breakdown of energy 
purchasing from neighbouring countries, highlighting what officials say 
is the importance of domestic power production and continued investment 
in the sector.
Of the 500 megawatts of power consumed each year 
by Cambodia, 42 per cent was bought from Thailand, Laos and Vietnam, 
Toch Sovanna, director of the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Energy 
(MIME), said last week.
The Kingdom’s demand for power would 
increase by as much as 500 per cent during the next 15 years, reaching 
about 3,000 megawatts by 2025, Toch Sovanna said.
The high cost 
of electricity had stymied Cambodia’s milled-rice and garment-production
 capacity, Prime Minister Hun Sen said during a government-private 
sector forum last week.
High-priced power was the leading cause of uncompetitive milled- rice exports, he said.
The
 Ministry of Economy and Finance has provided Electricite Du Cambodge, a
 wholly state-owned company, with US$80 million in zero-interest loans 
to enlarge electricity networks, but the country still needs more 
investment from abroad, officials say.
“We need hundreds of 
millions of dollars to extend the electricity networks. Ministry 
[officials] are discussing this with development partners such as Japan,
 Korea and France,” Sat Samy, Secretary of State at MIME, said.
The
 Kamchay hydroelectric dam – a $280 million investment by China’s 
Sinohydro Corporation – is scheduled to open on December 6. 
The dam, 112 metres high, will generate 193 megawatts a year. Sinohydro has a 40-year contract to operate the dam.

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