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| Cashew nuts, tipped for Cambodian success, are displayed at a store in Phnom Penh’s Chamkarmon district yesterday. (Photo: Pha Lina) | 
May Kunmakara
The Phnom Penh Post
CAMBODIA’S first cashew nut processing  plant could help create jobs in rural areas and give a welcome boost to  a growing industry.
Cambodia’s Mekong Rain Natural is set to invest US$5 million to build the plant, which it hopes will start production in March next year.
The plan has been welcomed by the government and industry insiders, who say it would  help grow the industry and create jobs. 
That view is supported by a new study from the International Finance Corporation, which found that local processing could boost the industry by an additional $30 million to $40 million a year.
Andrew McNaughton, chief  executive officer of Mekong Rain Natural, which buys from nearly 4,000  farmers, said the company decided to invest in the plant because of the  good quality of Cambodian cashew nuts and a recent increase in  production capacity.
The company recently launched a small pilot plant for processing organic cashew nuts, set to be marketed in Phnom Penh.
The full-scale plant would  produce 2,000 tonnes of processed cashews in the first year, increasing  to up to 10,000  tonnes per year in the future.
“We are happy to be contributing to the economic development in the rural areas of Cambodia,” said McNaughton.
He added that the price of raw  cashews was fluctuating from between 3,000 riel to 4,500 riel per  kilogram, while processed nuts would sell for about $8 per kg. The main  export markets are Europe, America, China and India.
Cambodia currently produces  about 60,000 tonnes of in-shell cashews a year, or 3 percent of the  world’s supply, making it the 11th largest producer, according to cashew  nut trade specialist James Fitzpatick of Ingredient Sourcing Solutions.  The average quality of Cambodian cashews in the 2009 to 2010 season  ranked fifth out of the world’s eleven top producers.
Phok Sovanrith, secretary of  state for the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Energy, said the  government wanted the industry expand because it would help poorer  farmers earn more income. “More local processing would also create jobs  in rural areas such as harvesting, shelling, and packing cashews for  export,” he said.
Improved farming techniques are also aiding yields.
President of cashew nut  association in Kampong Thom province, Kim Theang, who has been planting  since 1989, said that better methodology was increasing harvests, which  have in the past been popular with Vietnamese buyers.
 
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