Cambodia Defends River Dredging Amid Public Concerns
Infrastructure
2026年7月17日
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Phnom Penh Post
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Cambodia Defends River Dredging Amid Public Concerns

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Cambodia's Minister of Mines and Energy defended legally authorized sand dredging as essential for navigation, energy security, and infrastructure development. His remarks followed a recent confrontation between fishermen and a dredging company, addressing public concerns while explaining the necessity of the practice.

Minister of Mines and Energy Keo Rottanak has defended legally authorized sand dredging as essential for Cambodia’s navigation, energy security, and infrastructure development, while acknowledging public concern over its potential impact on riverbanks, fisheries, and communities. His intervention followed intense public debate over a recent violent confrontation involving fishermen and a company conducting sand-dredging operations near Phum Thmei village in Peam Ro district, Prey Veng province. Rottanak stated that the government was not seeking to dismiss public criticism or determine winners and losers in the dispute, noting that citizens who raised concerns were motivated by a shared desire to protect the country and ensure development benefited local communities. “The concerns raised by the public are legitimate concerns that the ministry and relevant institutions must continue to consider,” he said. However, he stressed that correctly licensed and technically managed dredging should not be equated with illegal or uncontrolled sand extraction. According to the minister, the government authorizes sand dredging for five principal purposes: maintaining navigable waterways, reducing flood and riverbank-collapse risks, supporting new infrastructure and keeping construction materials affordable, removing unexploded wartime ordnance, and generating state revenue. Free navigation He said the first and most important objective was to open and maintain inland navigation routes along the Mekong, Tonle Sap and other major waterways. Cambodia had yet to use the full economic potential of water transport, he noted, even though moving large quantities of goods by river was considerably cheaper than relying solely on roads, railways or air freight. Improved waterways would allow agricultural products and other goods to move more competitively to domestic and international markets, particularly once the Funan Techo Canal becomes operational and connects the Mekong and Bassac river systems with the coast in Kampot province. Rottanak said the government envisaged vessels carrying between 5,000 and 6,000 tonnes using the waterway during the dry season. Such vessels would require channels of at least eight metres in depth, and at present, many sections of the Mekong currently lack sufficient depth throughout the dry season. Navigation conditions were even more restricted on the Tonle Sap River, where dry-season vessels could generally carry only between 1,000 and 1,500 tonnes and were required to remain within narrow channels, he added. The minister used a licensed dredging zone near the downstream end of Koh Oknha Tei, opposite his own riverside residence near Wat Kean Khleang in Phnom Penh, to illustrate the government’s argument. He said sediment eroded from the upper part of the island accumulated downstream, gradually extending the island and narrowing the river channel. Without dredging, the sediment could divert the current towards Wat Kean Khleang and nearby homes, increasing the risk of riverbank collapse. “If the end of the island is not dredged, the land will continue extending into the river,” he said. He emphasised that licensed dredging should take place in the middle of the river or around sediment deposits, not immediately beside riverbanks. “Dredging close to the riverbank is absolutely not allowed,” he said. Preventing erosion, boosting economy, energy Strategically located dredging could redirect water flow away from vulnerable banks and prevent sediment from obstructing major waterways, he added. Rottanak also argued that selective dredging could reduce flooding by increasing the capacity of rivers and streams to carry water. He cited Pursat province, where sediment had made parts of the Pursat River shallow. Dredging the central channel, rather than areas close to the banks, could allow the river to absorb more water flowing from the Cardamom Mountains and reduce the risk of flooding in the provincial capital. The second major purpose of dredging was to protect existing infrastructure and support new national projects, including ports, roads and energy facilities. Rottanak said channels had to be dredged to enable fuel and other supplies to reach power plants, including the 400MW facility in Lvea Aem district, Kandal province. Without the recently restored navigation channel, fuel vessels would be unable to reach the plant, potentially forcing it to suspend operations at a time when Cambodia faced pressure from disruptions to global energy supplies, he warned. “If the channel is not restored so that ships can enter, we will face an electricity shortage,” he said. Similar dredging would be needed to provide year-round access for vessels carrying liquefied natural gas to a planned LNG-fired power facility in Koh Kong province, according to the minister. The access channel would require a depth of at least 14 metres during both high and low tides. Rottanak said such projects were intended to strengthen Cambodia’s electricity supply and reduce dependence on energy imported from neighbouring countries. The third objective was to supply construction sand at affordable prices. A complete ban on dredging around Phnom Penh would force builders to transport sand from distant provinces such as Pursat, sharply increasing transport and construction costs, he argued. The higher cost would ultimately be borne by families building homes, as well as companies investing in factories and other projects. “The government wants stone and sand to remain affordable so that people can build homes and investors can construct factories at reasonable cost,” he said. Disposing of submerged UXOs, supporting tax revenue Rottanak identified the removal of wartime explosives as the fourth objective. Decades of conflict had left bombs, ammunition and sunken military vessels in Cambodia’s rivers and lakes, particularly the fighting of the 1970s, he said. The government had authorized the Cambodian Mine Action Centre to conduct dredging and underwater searches for unexploded ordnance in waterways. As a sovereign state, Cambodia had a responsibility to ensure that waterways used by cargo ships and international tourists were sufficiently deep and free from explosive hazards, he added. The final objective was to generate royalties, taxes and customs revenue for the national budget. Rottanak said income from legally extracted sand was used alongside other state revenue to finance schools, healthcare, medicines, roads and other public infrastructure. He rejected suggestions that sand extracted during navigation or infrastructure work should be discarded, saying companies carrying out the dredging were permitted to sell it and were required to pay the appropriate revenue to the state. Bad actors squarely in sights The minister warned that the government would not tolerate collusion, under-reporting or the diversion of public revenue into private pockets. Source: Phnom Penh Post

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