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Cambodia: Virus helped Malaysian firm make millions in Kingdom

Malaysia-based Pestech International Bhd, the power infrastructure specialist, is earning millions of dollars on a regular basis from three major projects in Cambodia despite the Covid-19 pandemic, according to the company’s CEO.

Pestech CEO and Executive Director Paul Lim Pay Chuan believes the timing could not have been better because the group is collecting a monthly income of US$2.3 million to US$2.4 million from two electricity infrastructure jobs and one concession contract in the nation.

“COVID-19 is a new norm for us to handle, but the good thing is that most of the debt we are carrying right now has been turned into cash-generating assets,” he told The Edge news agency in an interview.

He says the stable income streams from Cambodia will allow Pestech to weather the current economic storm. “If you look at the commercial operation date of our two build-transfer projects, we could not have asked for better timing,” he added.

Pestech received the commercial operation date for its 230 kilovolt (kV)/500kV Sihanoukville-Bek Chan (Phnom Penh) power transmission infrastructure project on March 1. A month earlier, the group had received the transmission line project of 115kV from Siem Reap-Oddor Meanchey.

Together with the 230kV Kampong Cham-Kratie power transmission infrastructure project – a 25-year independent power transmitter concession which started in January 2018 – Pestech now has three major completed projects generating recurring cash flow for the group.

“Imagine if we hadn’t completed the two build-transfer projects in Cambodia, we would have been stuck and unable to collect any income after investing heavily there,” Lim said. “We consider ourselves very lucky because we managed to finish these projects right before the COVID-19 crisis worsened.”

Pestech International, which also specialises in solar power technology and infrastructure, has expanded its presence in the Kingdom.

In January, Pestech acquired a 94 percent stake in Green Sustainable Ventures (Cambodia). The investment is worth $4 million.

Pestech has been in Cambodia for many years now. The company built its first transmission line in Cambodia seven years ago. Later it won a contract to design, manufacture and install a 198 kilometre transmission line between Phnom Penh and the port city of Sihanoukville.

In 2017, it bagged the contract for a transmission line that will link Phnom Penh to the Stung Tatai hydropower dam in Koh Kong province.

Lim said that through the long-awaited spin-off of its Pestech (Cambodia) Plc unit in Cambodia, the group has identified its cornerstone investors and the initial public offering (IPO) – proposed as long ago as February 2016 – should materialise by the middle of this year. It will take place on the Cambodia Securities Exchange.

“We believe these cornerstone investors could help us grow in Cambodia and the Indochina region. We hope to retain an 80 percent stake in Pestech (Cambodia) at the end of the listing exercise. The rest will be held by the cornerstone investors and public investors,” he said.

Upon listing, Pestech (Cambodia) is expected to be worth about US$60 million in terms of market capitalisation. The company plans to raise fresh capital of not more than US$10 million.

Source: https://www.khmertimeskh.com/50720668/virus-helped-malaysian-firm-make-millions-in-kingdom/