Cambodia: Royal Group submits plan for coal-fired plant
New details have emerged on Royal Group's ambitions to expand its energy
portfolio after a government official clarified that Cambodia's biggest
conglomerate is seeking to develop its own coal-fired power plant, rather
than finance an existing one.
Tun Lean, a spokesman for the Ministry of Mines and Energy (MME) and
undersecretary of state for the Electricity Authority of Cambodia (EAC),
said yesterday that the ministry was reviewing a feasibility study for the
proposed power station submitted by the Royal Group earlier this year.
He clarified that the project was not linked to a 700-megawatt coal-fired
plant currently being developed by a joint venture between Cambodian
People's Party Senator Lao Meng Khin's Cambodia International Investment
Development Group (CIIDG) and the Chinese-based Erdos Hongjun Electric Power
Co - although the plant will also be based in the Stung Hav district of
Preah Sihanouk province.
According to Lean, the Royal Group was first authorised to commission a
feasibility study for its coal-fired power station in 2012, two years before
the CIIDG project's first 135-megawatt unit came online.
"The feasibility study prepared by Royal Group is under examination in MME,"
he wrote in an email. "The investment decision for this 400 to 500-megawatt
[plant] will be taken depending on the power demand of Cambodia."
Lean said that the ministry first received the feasibility study in June of
this year, and that while government officials were still looking over it,
they had yet to come to agreement on technical aspects of the plan.
"We still need to agree on the study, but we have asked for a review by
technicians," he said. "This is the first step and we need to look at
machinery and location."
He added that if approved, "Royal Group's project is expected to operate
after [the] year 2020," though he was unable to give an estimated cost for
its development.
Royal Group chairman Kith Meng could not be reached for comment yesterday
about the company's proposed thermal power station, while numerous calls to
company representatives went unanswered.
However, documents show that the conglomerate has been interested in the
project as far back as 2007, when it commissioned a feasibility study for a
500-megawatt coal-fired plant.
Werawat Niempasuk, business development manager for Owl Energy Ltd, the
Thai-based energy consultancy firm that conducted the feasibility study,
said he was not aware of the details of the 2007 study and that the company
was not involved in the Royal Group's recent application.
He said, however, that generally feasibility studies involve calculating an
estimated cost for development and include an environmental impact
assessment.
If realised, the Royal Group's coal-fired plant would be the third such
power station to be built in Stung Hav district.
The first was a 100-megawatt plant developed by Cambodia Energy Ltd, a local
subsidiary of Malaysia's Leader Universal Ltd, and launched in February
2014. The adjacent CIIDG power station came online in November 2014, and
currently operates at 270-megawatt capacity - about a third of its planned
total.
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Ref:
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/business/royal-group-submits-plan-coal-fired-pl
ant
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John Diecker
APT Consulting Group Co., Ltd.
www.aptthailand.com
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