Showing posts with label Cassava conversion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cassava conversion. Show all posts

Monday, December 05, 2011

Cambodia's Cassava Export Surges By 95%

12/5/2011

(RTTNews) - Cambodia's cassava export had increased by 95 percent year-on-year in the first ten months of the current year with the revenue surging by 267 percent, Commerce Ministry statistics released on Monday showed.

During January-October this year, Cambodia exported 228,250 tons of fresh and dry chip cassava, 95 percent more than 116,700 tons exported in the same period last year fetching an earning of $10.8 million, up by 267 percent from $2.94 million during the same period last year. Cambodia exports cassava mainly to Thailand, Vietnam and South Korea.

The Southeast Asian country had entered into an agreement for cassava exports to China and a few Chinese companies had already registered with Cambodia's Ministry of Agriculture for the exports, the Xinhua news agency reported quoting to a Chinese official.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

North Korean company sets up biofuel factory in Cambodia

Jul 16, 2008
DPA

Phnom Penh - A North Korean company said it would launch Cambodia's first biofuel factory, specializing in cassava conversion, by October, a newspaper reported Wednesday.

Rasmei Kampuchea daily reported MH Bio-energy Group's director Choi Wee Sung said he had already advised Prime Minister Hun Sen of the factory's inauguration date at a site on the outskirts of the capital and hoped it would help Cambodia go green.

The factory will buy a minimum of 30,000 tons of locally grown cassava per year to convert into ethanol for use as biofuel, and is expected to reach full capacity by next year, the paper quoted Choi as saying.

MH Bio-Energy Group describes itself on trading website Alibaba.com as 'the biggest Korean investment company in Cambodia.'

'We will produce bio-ethanol in 2008, we can supply all kinds of agricultural product especially cassava chip, cassava starch in the world market,' it says.

The paper quoted the prime minister's spokesman Eng Sophalet as welcoming the company's ambitions, and Choi said he has already been invited to expand nationally.

Cambodia maintains warm relations with North Korea, where former king Norodom Sihanouk maintains a residence.

It has thrown open its threadbare secondary industry market to all competitors willing to invest in factories, which are sparse and currently almost exclusively devoted to garments, leaving Cambodia to export its agricultural products and buy them back once processed.