As focus switches to renewable energy, pumped-storage hydropower project in Koh Kong province expected to be completed by 2029
Construction of a US$1 billion Chinese-invested hydropower station has begun in Cambodia to facilitate the Southeast Asian country’s use of renewable energy as the fallout from the Iran war constricts developing countries’ access to traditional fuel supplies.
Work on the Upper Tatay pumped-storage hydropower project in the hilly southwestern province of Koh Kong started on April 10, Xinhua reported, describing it as a future “green power bank” for Cambodia’s national grid.
It said the project was a “large-scale rechargeable battery system” with an installed capacity of one gigawatt.
The investment was big for Cambodia given its relatively small economy, said Jayant Menon, a visiting senior fellow at the ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore. It also came as Cambodia, like other developing countries, fretted over the price and availability of imported fuel due to Middle East bottlenecks and a lack of domestic refining, Menon said.
“The fuel crisis has hit Cambodia very hard,” he said.
Investors from China also helped build Cambodia’s US$2 billion Phnom Penh-Sihanoukville Expressway and an airport that opened last year near Phnom Penh. State-owned China National Heavy Machinery Corporation is developing the Upper Tatay project.
Xinhua said Chinese-built power plants had helped raise Cambodia’s electricity access rate – the percentage of the population with reliable access to electricity in their home – from roughly 50 per cent to about 96 per cent since 2010. It said the station would provide for “stable integration” of intermittent solar and wind energy.
Source: News - South China Morning Post