Gulf Times

Cambodia to boost clean energy use, but coal plants planned too

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Cambodia will push ahead with plans to use hydropower and coal to electrify the entire country by 2020, but solar energy will play some role, especially in remote areas, an energy ministry official said yesterday. The Southeast Asian nation has electrifie­d rapidly since 2000, when only 16% of the population had access to power, according to the World Bank.

Today, 87% of villages and 73% of households are connected to the grid, said Victor Jona, a spokesman for the department of energy at the Ministry of Mines and Energy. Hydropower accounts for 40% of the mix, while coal makes up 36%, with more plants being built, he said.

Power imports from neighbouri­ng countries contribute almost the entire remainder, with renewables such as solar accounting for less than 1%, he said. But Jona said the government has plans to develop more clean energy, especially in hardto-reach communitie­s.

“We hope that solar home systems will do the role for the very remote areas, in case the grid cannot expand to them,” he said on the sidelines of a clean energy conference in the capital, Phnom Penh. Some largerscal­e solar is also being added to the mix. Jona said constructi­on of a 60 megawatt solar plant in Kampong Speu province, west of the capital, is scheduled to be completed by the end of 2019. A 10MW solar plant came online this year, he said,

But hydropower and coal are still projected to make up 80% of Cambodia’s energy needs once the country achieves full electrific­ation, Jona said. Coalfired plants are under constructi­on, and will contribute another 150MW by next year, he said. Bridget McIntosh, the Cambodia director for Energy Lab, which works to promote clean electricit­y, said the the country should consider adding more renewable energy to its mix, especially as the cost of solar power falls. “It takes five years to build a coal-fired station or a dam, and in those five years, the cost of solar will continue to decline,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“So it makes more sense to now connect solar to the grid” to meet the country’s electrific­ation goals, she said. Moving away from coal can also help countries meet their Paris Agreement goals to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and help curb worsening climate impacts, including more extreme floods, droughts and sea level rise. Cambodia has committed to a 27% reduction in its climate-changing emissions by 2030, 16% of which will be achieved by promoting clean and more efficient energy.

However, to scale up solar and other power, Cambodia must create a more welcoming regulatory environmen­t for investment in it, said Pheakdey Heng, a founder of the Enrich Institute, a Phnom Penh-based think tank.

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