As Phnom Penh Grows, So Does Its Sewage Problem

May 10th, 2013, The Cambodia Daily, Business & Commercial Development, Construction, Environment & Natural Resources, Industry, Infrastructure, News, Social Concerns

Since 1998, Phnom Penh’s population has doubled to more than 2 million. High-rise buildings have popped up in the city’s center and housing developments have been hastily erected.

Yet the city’s antiquated, decades-old drainage system has undergone little improvement in that time and experts say the rapid urban growth currently underway could outpace the drainage system’s ability to channel rain and the increasing amount of water out of Phnom Penh.

Although the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) has been working with City Hall since 1999 to improve the drainage system, there is still no plan to install a wastewater treatment plant in order to prevent the vast amounts of raw sewage being pumped into the city’s lakes and waterways.

Adding further complications, City Hall has no complete underground plans of the drainage network and possesses limited means to ensure that piping is properly maintained. Authorities have no data on how much sewage the city currently produces.

JICA is currently constructing 20 km of additional piping in central Phnom Penh. Once a toilet is flushed, the wastewater travels down the pipes, through open canals or the underground drainage system and eventually arrives in Boeng Trabek, where morning glory and lotus plants partially purify the sewage through natural process.

Plants in the reservoir absorb the discarded water’s bacterial nutrients and break down the waste before it is funneled, black and fetid, through the Boeng Trabek pumping station. The Contents are then emptied into Boeng Tampoun and finally ejected into the Tonle Bassac and Tonle Sap rivers. …

“Phnom Penh City has been developing very fast and many commercial and industrial activities have been located in the downtown and peri-urban areas and the wastewater from these activates is generally high contamination,” said Seng Solsdy, a program officer from JICA, in an email. “With this situation, the construction of a waste-water treatment plant is very important for treating the wastewater from the city before discharging it to the river and to avoid impacts on the environment and people’s health.” …

Last year, alone the total value of approved construction projects nationwide increased by 72 percent to 2.11 billion, compared to 1.23 billion in 2011. …

Noun Rithy, CEO of Bonna Realty Group, agreed that many private developments often leave the issue of drainage as an afterthought. This is coupled with the fact that municipal authorities do very few of their own checks on the drainage provisions of new projects. …

Dene-Hern Chen and Kaing Menghun, P.1
www.cambodiadaily.com

Fish output likely to drop

October 24th, 2012, The Phnom Penh Post, Agriculture & Agri-business, Environment & Natural Resources, Fishing, Lakes/Rivers, News, News Source, Production, Social Concerns

Fishery resources could fall this year because of a lack of flooding along rivers and waterways impeding fish from travelling freely or finding food to encourage their growth, a fishery official says.

Sam Nov, deputy general director of Fishery Administration at the Ministry of Agriculture, Fishery and Forestry, said the level of water in Tonle Sap had reduced, resulting in decreased disbursement of the fish that migrate there. …

Minh Bunly, program co-ordinator for Tonle Sap Lake at the Fisheries Action Coalition Team, a Cambodian alliance of local and international NGOs, said there were varying views from fishermen in different areas.

He said some believed that outputs dropped because of the lack of flooding, but some said the amount increased as a result of limiting fishing lots owned by the wealthy. …

Rann Reuy, P. 8
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012102459389/Business/fish-output-likely-to-drop.html

Xayaburi opposition escalates in Thailand

May 1st, 2012, The Phnom Penh Post, Energy, Environment & Natural Resources, Environmental change, Hydroelectricity, Lakes/Rivers, News, News Source

Criticism of the controversial Xayaburi hydro dam project in northern Laos is mounting in Thailand – the country set to enjoy most of the electricity if the project is completed.

Representatives from 130 Thai civil-society organisations yesterday published a statement backing a report that outlines an alternative power plan to the 1,260-megawatt dam project on the Mekong River…

Shane Worrell
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012050155887/National-news/xayaburi-opposition-escalates-in-thailand.html

Deforestation for Sesan River dam project ceases, for now

January 27th, 2012, The Cambodia Daily, Energy, Environment & Natural Resources, Environmental change, Hydroelectricity, Lakes/Rivers, News Source, Timber/Wood

Workers who were seen last week clearing forestland in Stung Treng province in preparation for the construction of the 400-megawatt Lower Sesan 2 dam have stopped their work after receiving an order to do so by the district governor, officials said yesterday.

Sesan district governor Bou Keo Sovann said that he ordered district police on Tuesday to stop workers of Vietnam Electricity (EVN) from clearing land in his district…

Phok Dorn, p.23
http://www.camnet.com.kh/cambodia.daily/   (Note: Infrequently Updated.)

New project aims to lower levels of industrial pollution

October 19th, 2011, The Cambodia Daily, Environment & Natural Resources, Extractive Industries, Industry

Industrial pollution ‘hot-spots’ have been identified in waterways in Phnom Penh, Kandal and Kompong Cham provinces following a five-month period of research as part of a UN-backed effort to encourage companies to adopt cleaner practices.

The hot spots – defined as a source of pollution where industrial waste can be discharged into a river directly or through sewage systems that drain into lakes, then rivers – were highlighted between May and September in a bid to promote eco-friendliness.

Sokchea Hak, a project coordinator for the UN Industrial Development Organisation (Unido), said the hot spots were found “where most industry is located,” but that “water quality [in the area] is still in good shape.”…

Lauren Crothers and Phok Dorn, p.26
http://www.camnet.com.kh/cambodia.daily/   (Note: Infrequently Updated.)