The massive and highly controversial Lower Sesan 2 Dam project took a major
step forward yesterday with the inking of government power purchase agreements
and an investment deal between Royal Group and a Chinese company.
But details about the contracts,
their implementation or the fate of the thousands of villagers who could be
displaced by the dam remain shrouded in secrecy.
Hydrolancang International Energy
Co Ltd CHINA, a subsidiary of the state-owned China Huaneng company, signed an
investment Memorandum of Understanding with Cambodian tycoon Kith Meng’s Royal
Group yesterday for an initial two-year financial injection into the group’s
Lower Sesan 2 hydropower dam project.
The planned dam has come under
fire from groups such as International Rivers, which has said the hydropower
project would be one of the most destructive in the Mekong network and the
worst of the tributary projects, wrecking havoc on fisheries and the river
ecosystem.
Green groups have slammed the
project for a lack of transparent environmental evaluation and predict the
anticipated hydropower dam will likely flop and be unable to generate the
promised wattage.
Key Royal Group representatives,
including Kith Meng, refused to provide any details about the MoU or the
progress of the 400MW dam in Stung Treng province at yesterday’s signing
ceremony at Kith Meng’s Hotel Cambodiana.
The small and perfunctory signing
ceremony with HIE was followed by the inking of three agreements between
government ministries and Hydropower Lower Sesan 2, Co Ltd, the joint venture
at the helm of the large-scale development.
During an address given to the
approximately 80 government and company representatives in attendance, Deputy
Prime Minister for Economy and Finance Keat Chhon, who presided over the
ceremony, announced that 100 per cent of the electricity generated by the
hydropower dam would be consumed in Cambodia.
If, in the future, due to surplus
generation, electricity was sold to neighbouring countries, this would only
ever be a small amount, the minister added.
Representatives from the
Vietnamese arm of the project were not present during the ceremony.
Further details of the signed
implementation, lease and power purchase agreements were not discussed and
government ministers present at the ceremony declined to respond to questions
from the media.
A bevy of Cambodian beauty queens
and celebrities were trotted out to the red-carpet signing, which businessmen
and politicians toasted with flutes of Moët champagne.
Speaking by telephone from his
wooden, thatched-roof house in Srekor commune in Stung Treng’s Sesan district,
wedged between the Sesan and Srepok rivers, villager Seak Mekong said his
community still had heard nothing from the businessmen in Phnom Penh about
compensation for their homes.
Provincial Governor Loy Sophat
and local authorities visited the Srekor and Tra Kol communes on Sunday to
inform the villagers that construction of the project would begin in earnest
early next year, Meach Mean of the 3S Rivers Protection Network told the Post.
The communes are slated to be
flooded as part of the project.
“Most of Tra Kol community agreed
to move about 15 kilometres away to a heavily forested, jungle area and most of
the Srekor community agreed to move a long way away to an area beside a highway
road,” Mean said.
“The provincial and local
authorities invited community representatives to inspect the land from the end
of this month until next year.”
However, land titling,
compensation and relocation costs were still up in the air, as was the
availability of electricity, water and infrastructure such as schools and
hospitals at the proposed relocation areas, Mean said.
“The community agreeing to move
is just a first step; there is still no other information. I think at this
stage no one can really say ‘no’ anymore.”
For Seak Mekong and his fellow
villagers, the lack of information flowing to the public about the project
created an omnipresent sense of unease about their futures.
“I fear our living conditions
will return to as it was in the Pol Pot regime. We are so poor and we have no
power against [the companies building the dam],” Mekong lamented.
Bridget Di Certo and May Titthara
Business & Investment Opportunities
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