Tuesday, 04 January 2011 15:00 Soeun Say 
CAMBODIA’S first biofuel  production plant has pushed its restart back until at least July, as the  high prices of cassava continues to halt company plans, according to  company officials.
“At the moment, we have no plans  to reopen, but we hope to restart in July of this year,” said Kim  Jong-ho, director of administration at MH Bio-Energy Cambodia.
“The price of cassava remains  high. We are waiting for the price to decrease, and now, we are  harvesting our cassava,” he said yesterday.
South Korean MH Bio-Energy plant  is a Kandal province factory that uses cassava to produce ethanol for  sale largely to Europe. It first opened in November 2008 with an initial  investment of US$30 million. 
In 2009, MH Bio-Energy plant exported 29,406 tonnes of bio-ethanol to European markets.
However, the plant’s doors have been closed since May 2010 because of rising crop prices. 
The firm has acquired some 8,000  hectares to plant cassava in a bid to end purchases of cassava on the  open market, but to date has only planted 1,700 hectares. 
“It is not enough for our  production,” said Kim Jong-ho. “We need to plant 6,000 hectares of  cassava to support our production this year.”
The factory requires 10,000 tonnes of cassava per month to produce bio-ethanol, a compound that can be blended with petrol. 
Dry-chip cassava currently  fetches $240 per tonne, which is a hike up from $170 to $180 per tonne  the product commanded on markets this time last year, he said.
MH Bio-Energy had already  postponed its re-launch due to similar concerns. In October, the firm’s  Chief of Administration Boeun Thy had said he had anticipated a December  restart, due to the high price of cassava.
Banteay Meanchey province  cassava farmer Chok Pouk said that cassava prices rested on demand,  largely from Thai and Vietnamese markets.
She currently sells at 2,800 baht or $93, per tonne for the unprocessed crop, up from 1,200 baht or $45 last year.
Cambodia ought to push to open  markets other than Thailand and Vietnam to increase opportunities for  farmers, she said, adding her farm had increased to 400 hectares on the  back of larger demand.
“I hope there will be a new market in China,” she said. “We’re looking to export to China soon.”
Last month, Prime Minister Hun Sen said a deal on cassava was to be signed during a five-day official to China.






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