Port Expansion Project to Meet Increasing Goods Traffic

The Ministry of Public Works and Transport (MPWT) has laid out a port expansion project of the country’s deep seaport in Sihanoukville to meet the growing goods traffic passing through the port.
The point was raised in a meeting to review the progress of new container terminal construction project-Phases 2 & 3 of Sihanoukville Autonomous Port, held here on Dec. 9 under the chairmanship of H.E. Sun Chanthol, Senior Minister and Minister of MPWT.
In his presentation to the meeting, H.E. Lou Kimchhun, Director General of Sihanoukville Autonomous Port, said the second and third phases of the new terminal construction project will be able to handle large container vessels in the Asia-Pacific region and respond to the increasing volume of containers passing through this port at present and the future.
The second phase of this deep-water terminal is expected to complete in 2028 while the third phase in 2030, he added.
The first phase of the project, which is 350 metres long and 14.5 metre deep, can handle container vessels of 13 metre deep, and medium-sized vessels with a capacity of 5,000 TEUs. It is funded by a US$200 million concessional loan from the Government of Japan and is scheduled to finish in 2025.
H.E. Sun Chanthol applauded the project and encouraged relevant officials to continue to carry out well the project so that it can be completed as planned.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

More COVID-19 Vaccine via COVAX Facility Arrive in Cambodia

Cambodia this morning received 290,400 doses of AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine, a donation of the Government of the Netherlands via COVAX Facility.
H.E. Dr. Yuok Sambath, Secretary of State at the Ministry of Health and Dr. Li Ailan, Representative of the World Health Organisation (WHO) in Cambodia welcomed the vaccines’ arrival at Phnom Penh International Airport.
Speaking to reporters at the airport, they encouraged Cambodians to get vaccinated and continue to stick to the health safety rules, especially the Three Dos, Three Don’ts measure.
On behalf of the Royal Government and people of Cambodia, H.E. Dr. Yuok Sambath expressed profound thanks to the Government of the Netherlands for the humanitarian donation.
With the newly arrived vaccines, Cambodia has now more than 40.5 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines from purchases and donations: 7,800,000 doses of Sinopharm, 29,124,800 doses of Sinovac, 2,353,400 doses of AstraZeneca, 1,064,600 doses of Johnson & Johnson, and 188,160 doses of Moderna.
As of Dec. 9, some 88.72 percent of the total Cambodian population of 16 million have been vaccinated against the COVID-19 pandemic.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

COVID-19: 15 New Cases, 12 New Recoveries, 4 New Deaths

Only 15 new infections of COVID-19 were recorded in Cambodia, announced the Ministry of Health in its press release this morning.
These are PCR test results, it said, adding that one of the new infections was imported and the rest were linked to the Feb. 20 community outbreak.
The national counts thus increased to 120,327, including 19,850 imported cases.
At the same time, there were 12 new recoveries, but 4 new deaths (3 of them have not been vaccinated); bringing the total cured and death cases in the Kingdom to 116,680 and 2,978, respectively.
The first COVID-19 case was reported in Cambodia in late January 2020 in Preah Sihanouk province. The confirmed cases have surged quickly this year due to the Feb. 20 incident.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

IMF Sees Gradual Recovery to Pre-Crisis Growth of 6.5 percent

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) expects the Cambodian economy to stage a gradual recovery from the Covid pandemic to achieve pre-crisis growth of around 6.5 percent in the medium term.
In its annual assessment of Cambodia released in Washington on Thursday, the IMF said external demand was being fueled by buoyant recoveries in the United States, China and Europe.
“Assuming tourism resumes but takes some time to recover to pre-crisis levels, near-term growth mostly depends on manufacturing and other services,” it said.
But “over-supply in commercial and residential properties is likely to see growth in construction and real estate remain subdued, compared to pre-crisis years.”
After shrinking by an estimated 3.1 percent last year, the IMF said GDP growth is expected to be a bit more than 2.0 percent this year before rising to around 6.5 percent, supported by transfers to households and robust capital spending.
In 2022, the country’s current account deficit — measuring trade in goods and services along with certain financial transactions like grants — is forecast to narrow as external demand recovers.
The main improvements are expected to be from tourist services supported by benefits from bilateral free-trade agreements with China and Korea for light manufacturing and agriculture.
“Financial inflows – mainly in the form of foreign direct investment — are expected to continue to be strong over the medium term,” the IMF said.
Downside risks are seen in three areas — the still raging global pandemic, “potentially inadequate provisioning and weak capital buffers” in bank loan portfolios along with recent droughts and floods.
The IMF said Cambodian authorities shared its outlook. Their growth projections “differed only marginally, with slightly higher growth expected in 2021 and slightly lower growth for 2022,” the report said.
As of the financial system’s exposure to Covid-related distress, it is still “profitable and well capitalised” and loan restructuring policies have “supported the economy and avoided widespread bankruptcies.
“Nonetheless, the authorities agreed that the build-up of restructured loans was a concern requiring heightened vigilance,” the IMF said.
Cambodian authorities also agreed that banks fully recognising loan losses would be an “important first step toward a gradual and calibrated normalisation of prudential requirements” — depending on the results of stress tests and additional data reported by banks.
In the area of structural reforms, the IMF said the recovery’s quality would be affected by several long-standing challenges — notably a lack of diversification and low value added in exports.
Other challenges include high labor informality and perceptions of governance weaknesses and corruption, and emerging vulnerabilities from climate change.
“Trade and investment liberalisation has helped Cambodia to move from dependence on agriculture toward light manufacturing,” the report said.
“However, so far this has been limited mainly to relatively low-skill value-added activities. Diversifying and raising value added requires continued progress on ‘horizontal’ policies to boost fundamentals such as institutions, education, and technological readiness.”
The IMF also noted that Cambodia had “one of the highest rates of informality in the region” with informal employment accounting for more than 90 percent of the workforce — similar to levels in Laos and Nepal and compared with less than 80 percent in Vietnam.
“Informal firms are usually much less productive than formal firms,” it said. “Informality also reduces the tax base, and informal workers are not covered by social-protection measures such as pension systems and health insurance. The authorities have pursued a policy of tax breaks to encourage firms to formally register. These measures could be bolstered with information campaigns and simplification of registration.”
As for corruption, the IMF said efforts to diversify and move up value chains were likely to be “undermined” without progress to reduce “informal customs charges” and other costs.
“In addition, extensive corruption reduces the net benefits workers and firms see from paying taxes as part of the formal economy,” it said.
The report suggested boosting the effectiveness of the Anti-Corruption Unit by “increasing its operational independence and transparency and stepping up investigations through better use of financial intelligence.”
At the same time, “legal reforms to introduce due diligence measures for business relationships with domestic politically exposed persons would help detect cases of corruption.”
As for Cambodia’s debt levels, the IMF said its debt sustainability analysis “indicates that Cambodia remains at low risk of external and overall debt distress.”

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

USAID-Funded Agriculture Processing Project Places High Hope on Markets and Exports

Farmers in Battambang province have secured markets through the contract farming supplying agricultural products for processing into spices and food supplements for domestic markets and exports.
Granted fund from the USAID under the Cambodia Harvest2 project, Ringacam has been working with two agricultural cooperatives composed of 120 families in Samlot district, Battambang province on the project of increasing production of agricultural crops.
Mr. Heu Vannak, Director of the Ringacam, said the Cambodia Harvest2’s assistance has help his enterprise continued in the light of COVID-19 pandemic.
“Under this project, Ringacam has collaborated with two farming communities in Samlot district, Battambang province, and provided GAP training to 120 farmers, cultivating various crops including turmeric, banana, and ginger and contracted with farmers to ensure sustainable supply and distribution in the market,” he said.
Mr. Heu Vannak stated that the enterprise processes the harvested agricultural products according to GMP and HACCP standards for consumers and partners acceptable for resell with confidence as a product with high hygiene and verified technical standards.
The enterprise also cooperates and seeks partners to distribute products abroad through the Cambodian Food Processing Community, the Cambodian Pepper and Spices Federation, the Cambodian Federation of Small and Medium Enterprises, Cambodian Entrepreneurs, especially the Cambodian Ministry of Commerce, he said.
“We supply processed products to the local market in Cambodia and we are trying to seek partners to distribute at overseas markets by participating in national and international exhibitions through trade fairs and business to business meeting with manufacturers, distributors and consumers,” he said.
Mr. Mak Ny, President of the Cambodian Pepper and Spices Federation, applauded the move and said researches on the collection of the data of agricultural crops for spices will be made.
“The association will conduct researches more about the potential of crops used for processing for products,” he said.
Ringacam, established in 2016 with the Ministry of Industry, Science, Technology and Innovation, is a local natural agricultural processing handicraft in Cambodia.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press