Showing posts with label Se San hydropower plants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Se San hydropower plants. Show all posts

Monday, January 30, 2012

Vietcong investment in the Se San Hydroelectric project in Cambodia: $806 million

Firms invest $2 billion in foreign projects


January, 30 2012
VNS (Hanoi)

HCM CITY — Vietnamese companies are investing in more overseas projects, with total registered capital amounting to US$2.12 billion last year, according to figures from the Ministry of Planning and Investment.

The investments were for 75 new overseas projects licensed in 2011, and 33 other projects already operating abroad.

The biggest of the overseas projects were in the energy and telecommunications sectors, an MPI report said.

Major projects licensed in 2011 include the Se San Hydro-Power No. 2 Project in Cambodia with total registered capital of $806 million from the Electricity of Viet Nam (EVN); a $408 million telecommunication project invested by the Vietnamese Military Telecommunications Group (Viettel) in Peru; and the $275.2 million Se Kong 3 Hydro-power Project invested by Song Da (Black River) Corp in Laos.

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Trade with VN should start with TRUST and RESPECT, and not with TRAMPLING of Khmer rights (Tim Sakhorn) and VIOLATING Cambodian borders

Travellers pass the Phnom Den-Tinh Bien International Border Gate in An Giang Province to trade goods every day. — VNS Photo Phan Trong An

Viet Nam and Cambodia vow to develop trade during visit

08-11-2007
VNS

PHNOM PENH — Viet Nam and Cambodia should further develop co-operation in industry and trade and effectively implement signed bilateral and multilateral agreements and mutual development commitments to support regional and international integration.

The statement was made by Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen when receiving Viet Nam’s Minister of Industry and Trade Vu Huy Hoang in Phnom Penh on Monday.

On the same day, Minister Hoang was received by Deputy Prime Minister and Chairman of the Cambodian National Petroleum Authority Sok An.

Sok An expressed the need to strengthen co-operation between Viet Nam and Cambodia in industry and trade, especially in oil and gas exploration and exploitation. He affirmed that Cambodia was ready to boost oil and gas co-operation with foreign partners, including Viet Nam.

At a working session with Cambodian Minister of Industry, Mines and Energy Suy Sem, the two sides signed a memorandum of understanding on speeding up the construction of a 220kV transmission line between Viet Nam and Phnom Penh through the border Takeo Province as well as a 110kV power transmission system in the border Kompong Cham Province.

They also agreed to jointly implement projects in industry, mining and energy that are part of a co-operative programme approved at the 9th session of the Viet Nam-Cambodia Intergovernmental Committee in Phnom Penh on August 21.

These include projects to build a hydropower plant on Se San River, establish a mineral exploitation joint venture and train labour for Cambodia.

Minister Hoang and Cambodian Minister of Trade Cham Prasit signed a memorandum of understanding stating that Viet Nam would allow Cambodia to enjoy tariff incentives and non-quota policies on 25 agricultural products.

The two ministers affirmed that two-way trade between Viet Nam and Cambodia would reach U$1 billion this year.

During its stay in Cambodia from November 4 to 6, the delegation worked with the Cambodia Development Council and attended the closing ceremony of the Viet Nam-Cambodia Trade Fair 2007 in Phnom Penh.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

The scourge of the damned Vietnamese dams on the Se San River

The Jarai people live along the Se San River on both sides of the Vietnamese and Cambodian border. (Photo: Ian Baird)
Se San River Basin (Map: Australian Mekong Resource Centre)

Plenty of aid, but is it for a 'Greater' Mekong?

Wednesday, 10 October 2007
By Andrew Hewett Online Opinion (Australia)

His name is Bunlaamb and he lives on the banks of the usually-sanguine Se San River in north-eastern Cambodia. But for the last seven years, the life of this farmer-fisherman, and the rest of his village, has been turned upside down by sudden water fluctuations caused by a series of large hydropower dams built upstream, on the Vietnamese side of the border.

"People used to be very happy. They were able to catch fish from many places. But then floods started. At first, we didn't know why the flooding happened. When we returned to our village after the flooding, our rice fields were destroyed and our chickens washed away. Villagers are scared now, many people have moved away.”

Bunlaamb’s story is illustrative of the plight of scores of rural communities across the Mekong region where there is a massive program of hydropower development currently underway. This is largely the brainchild of the Asian Development Bank (ADB), which over the last decade and a half has spearheaded a grand vision of “regional integration” for the six Mekong countries, essentially seeking to form them into one borderless economy- the Greater Mekong Subregion.

Key to this process are large scale infrastructure developments - trans-national highways, hydropower dams, regional energy grids and river dredging for heavy freight barges. As a result the region’s economies are booming, but at what cost? Communities of poor, marginalised and ethnic minority groups seem to have been the main casualties along the way.

At the end of September delegates from mainland South-East Asia and Australia gathered at the University of Sydney for a major conference on development in the Mekong Region (Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, Burma and southern China). And one of the key questions there should have been: when does Australian overseas aid bring about positive changes for poor people and when can it actually have negative impacts upon their quality of life?

The role of Australia’s aid program in the Mekong region was brought sharply into focus. Last week Oxfam Australia released a report, examining the negative impacts of economic change in the Mekong region. One of the most important findings is that while average incomes may be rising, many of the rural poor (and especially ethnic minorities) are actually experiencing declining quality of life. This is mainly due to the destruction of the forests and rivers upon which they depend for food, drinking, housing, medicines and so on.

For example, in Sekong Province in Laos people derive enormous benefit from the forest, even though average annual incomes are little more than $150 per year. If they lose access to forest resources (which is rapidly happening), it would take a rise in annual income of more than $600 to stop a decline in their standard of living.

The report highlights the high level of economic vulnerability of ethnic minorities in the face of new markets and commercial industries.

An investigation by Oxfam Australia into a series of ADB infrastructure projects found that although the Bank had policies which were supposed to safeguard the poor and the environment, “the ADB’s capacity to implement, monitor and generally comply with its own policies is questionable”. Moreover, there are concerns that the Bank is actually trying to weaken its existing safeguard policies.

Into this mix, the Australian Government is promising a remarkable commitment of $40-50 million each year for the ADB’s Greater Mekong Subregion Program, predominantly for infrastructure projects. Increased aid is often presented as a self-evident good, but will it really alleviate poverty? Will it be the right sort of aid? While there are some indications that AusAID is trying not to replicate some of the ADB’s shortcomings - for example, it will focus on small-scale energy decentralisation, not massive dams - there is cause for concern.

AusAID’s safeguards policies for infrastructure projects are actually weaker than the ADB’s, and, unlike the ADB, AusAID has no independent complaints mechanism - not a good basis for Australia to embark on major infrastructure financing.

The Australian Government has an obligation to ensure its new aid program in the Mekong makes a positive contribution, and does not actually create or perpetuate poverty. It should at least undertake a thorough assessment of the economic vulnerability of rural communities (especially ethnic minorities) that may be brought about by infrastructure development - communities know best what works for them. And it should introduce clear and strong policies safeguarding the environment, the indigenous and relocated people from adverse impacts of infrastructure development. This must include an easy-to-use independent complaints mechanism.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Vietnamese assault in energy and mining all over Cambodia

August 27, 2007
Vietnam-Cambodia ties focus on energy and mining

VNA (Hanoi)

Vietnam-Cambodia industrial co-operation will focus on energy, mining and electricity, according to the Ministry of Industry and Trade.

The ministry said Vietnam has sold nearly 85 million kWh of medium-voltage electricity to Cambodia since 2002.

Under a contract signed between the Electricity of Cambodia (EDC) and the Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) in 2002, Vietnam will provide the neighbouring country with a maximum capacity of 200 MW as of 2009.

Vietnam and Cambodia also signed a memorandum of understanding on developing feasibility studies for the 90MW Se San 1 and 420MW Se San 2 Hydropower Plants.

The Vietnam National Coal-Mineral Industries Group (Vinacomin) has carried out surveys of bauxite mines in Mondulkiri province and iron ores in Stung Treng province.

The group is working with Cambodian companies to boost co-operation in exploring other minerals such as limestone, coal and metal.

In the oil and gas field, the two countries is promoting co-operation and joint studies in the Tole’Sap lake waters.