Thursday, 31 May 2012
By Rann Reuy
Phnom Penh Post
Canadia Bank will launch a rice mill in Cambodia’s Takeo province in
October, a move that insiders said could help curb the flow of unmilled
rice to neighbouring Vietnam.
Bank officials yesterday said they
will buy US$3 million in milling equipment, and the total cost of the
facility was expected to be $10 million.
Equipment would be
imported from several countries including Japan, Taiwan and China, and
the mill would look to export to the European Union, China and the
Philippines.
The plant would have a capacity of 600 tonnes of
milled rice per day by 2013, Bun Khim, rice milling manager at Canadia
Bank, said yesterday, adding that operation procedures were still
unknown because the factory was in the planning stages. “Now we don’t
know how to operate the plant because we are preparing the machines,” he
said.
Doung Heng, the president of Takeo province’s Rice Millers
Association, said that the operation of Canadia Bank’s rice milling
would not be a competitive force among local rice millers, but it would
curb the flow of unmilled rice to Vietnam.
“The operation is
good for reducing the amount of unmilled rice to neighbouring countries.
We cannot stop exporting paddy all at once, but we can reduce it by
means of investment.”
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