By May Kunmakara
Friday, 18 May 2012
Phnom Penh Post
Crown Holdings, a metal packaging company, said this week it would build
a second factory in Cambodia to keep up with the Kingdom’s growing beer
industry.
The Sihanoukville factory, which is expected to
produce 725 million aluminium cans a year, will be begin operating in
the third quarter of 2013, according to a statement from the company.
Crown spokesman Michael Dunleavy did not respond to questions about the company’s initial investment in the factory.
In the statement, Crown’s Asia-Pacific president noted the Kingdom’s growing industry.
“Cambodia is growing at a steady pace,” Jozef Salaerts said.
“This,
in turn, is driving increased demand for our customers’ products, and
we are experiencing a preference on their part for two-piece aluminum
beverage cans.”
The general manager of Phnom Penh Beers, which
produces the Special and Phnom Penh Beer brands, confirmed that his
company also bought cans from Crown and said the expansion was
necessary.
“The beer industry in our country is very big, so
their investment expansion is right,” the brewery’s Taing Sry Uy said
yesterday.
The Cambodian food and beverage industry was worth
US$1 billion in 2011, Mines, Industry and Energy Minister Suy Sem said
this week at the official opening of the Khmer Brewery.
About 40 per cent of that value was in the beer industry, Suy Sem said.
Crown opened its first plant in Cambodia in 2008.
Crown
Holdings has plants in Cambodia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand,
as well three plants in Vietnam, according to the company’s statement.
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