Kamchay Dam Claims Not Behind Kampot Flood
Khmer Times/Chea Vannak
Thursday, 19 November 2015
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The 194-megawatt, $280-million Kamchay Hydroelectric Power Plant over Kamchay River in Kampot province. KT / Chea Vannak |
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School of Vice: Yet another denial of accountability?
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KAMPOT
(Khmer Times) –The Chinese company that operates the hydroelectric
power plant on the Kamchay River in Kampot province yesterday denied
that a decision to open the dam’s gates during a recent storm was the
cause of severe flooding in the area.
Zheng
Yong, General Manager Assistant of the Sinohydro Kamchay Hydroelectric
plant, told Khmer Times yesterday that since the dam began operations in
2012 it has never caused any problems for people living downstream.
In
August this year, a flash flood hit people and rice fields. Critics
said the flood occurred because the damn released water after heavy
rains. The dam has a capacity of 700 million cubic meters.
Mr.
Zheng said that the release of the water was at the order of the
Cambodian electricity authority (EDC), which wanted an increase in power
production.
Kul
Sokha, deputy director of the Mines and Energy Department in Kampot,
said he does not think the flooding was cause by the release of water
from the dam. “It was a seasonal flood,” Mr. Sokha said.
“As
you know, Kampot province is always flooded,” Mr. Sokha said, adding
that since the dam’s construction flooding had decreased.
Mr. Zheng said: “We help people downstream to avoid facing floods. And we keep water sustainable for them to farm.”
The
Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Kamchay Dam was constructed by the
Sinohydro Kampchay Hydroelectric Project, a local subsidiary of the
Chinese state-owned hydro ower engineering and construction company
Sinohydro Corp. It supplies electricity to Kampot province, Preah
Sihanoukville and Phnom Penh.
But some nearby residents say the dam has had a negative impact.
Cambodia
has six hydropower dams in four provinces – Koh Kong, Pursat, Kampong
Speu and Kampot – supplying 62 percent of national electricity
production. The country still imports electricity from Vietnam and
Thailand.
At
a presentation to 45 electrical engineering students from three
universities during a two-day study tour to the Kamchay Dam on
Wednesday, Ministry of Mines and Energy officials said Cambodia’s dams
would increase to seven after the Lower Se San II dam construction
finishes in 2017.
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