By KER MUNTHIT / AP WRITER
PHNOM PENH — Impoverished Cambodia hopes to build a nuclear power plant to meet its future energy needs and help offset its dependence on imported oil, Prime Minister Hun Sen announced Friday during the first meeting of his new Cabinet.
In outlining his new government's vision, he said one of its priorities will be to expand electrical generation to power its small but growing economy. Increased housing and factory construction will generate more demand for electricity, he said.
Hun Sen offered no hint when Cambodia would actually have its first nuclear power plant, saying it is still "a long distance away for us, but this is our goal."
Building hydroelectricity and coal power plants will be the immediate priority for expanding electricity generation and reducing reliance on imported oil, Hun Sen said.
The government has identified 14 potential sites for hydropower plants and has granted contracts to Chinese companies to build several of them.
Electricity costs in Cambodia are among the highest in the world, and only about 15 percent of the country's 14 million people are connected to the power grid, according to the World Bank.
Cambodia is the latest country in the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations to express interest in pursuing nuclear energy. Neighboring Thailand also recently decided to press forward with studies on building a nuclear power plant.
At their meeting last year, the regional grouping's energy ministers agreed to set up a network to explore nuclear safety issues after acknowledging that some member nations were exploring nuclear energy.
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