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Big Thai Cement Firm Plans Major Factory in Burma
Major Thai cement maker Siam Cement Group (SCG) is to move its main manufacturing base to Burma, according to the International Cement Review newspaper.
The Bangkok-based giant plans to build production facilities in
southeastern Burma’s Tenasserim Division, it said, quoting a SCG company
manager.
“SCG is planning to manufacture its main products in [Burma] and is
willing to open four retail stores in Yangon, Mandalay Naypyidaw and one
other major city,” said Soontornpol Veerapravati.
World Cement magazine said SCG also wants to build a hydro dam to provide electricity for the factory or factories.
Industry observers expressed surprise that SCG is not considering
Dawei for the location of a factory, given the proposals by other Thai
firms to develop an industrial port there.
“If it goes ahead Dawei will have transport infrastructure, at least
linking into Thailand,” said an industry source in Bangkok speaking on
condition of anonymity. “The siting of production facilities in the deep
south of Burma is surprising also when the initial demand for cement is
likely to come from the greater Rangoon region.”
SCG, which already exports millions of tonnes of cement to Burma, has
given no timetable for Burmese developments nor disclosed the level of
investment.
Patience a Virtue for Would-be Investors, Says US Study
Success for foreign investors in the new Burma will need much
patience as well as getting the “model of entry right,” a new study of
opportunities said.
Burma is poised to “assume great geopolitical-business importance in
years to come,” the survey by US think tank Frost & Sullivan said.
And China’s dominance of much of Burma’s economy is expected to
change, said the firm’s vice president Vivek Vaidya in the survey.
“Southeast Asian companies are rushing to invest in the country. US
and international companies are also doing so, but on a more selective
and wait-and-see nature,” said Vaidya.
But like other surveys before it, the Frost & Sullivan report
warns that many potential investors will remain in a wait-and-see mode
until there is a substantial improvement in basic infrastructure such as
electricity supply, water, ports and roads.
Burma should benefit from having a young population, but only if
there is a major migration to urban centers of development, as happened
in China, the report added.
Thailand a ‘Gateway’ for Tourists to Burma
Thai Tourism planners want to develop Thailand to become a base for tourists to visit neighboring countries such as Burma.
“As neighboring countries open up, tourists will want a fresh
experience, so we can capitalize on this development and market Thailand
as a gateway,” the president of the Association of Thai Tourism
Marketing said this week.
By creating easy links to Burma, Laos, Cambodia and Malaysia,
Thailand could attract new visitors, said the association’s Mingkwan
Metmowlee.
There were two possible cross-over links between Thailand and Burma
which the association should look at, he said. These are via Thailand’s
far north province of Chiang Rai and through a new road being built from
the Thai border town of Kanchanaburi to Dawei on Burma’s southeast
coast.
Thai firms have drawn up plans to develop isolated southeastern Burma
by constructing a port at Dawei as well as an industrial zone, but the
project has been stalled all this year due to a lack of funds.
Thailand had logged almost 16 million tourists in 2012 up to the end
of September, the Department of Tourism and Sports said, and was on
target to clock 20 million visitors in a year for the first time.
Russian Trade Group ‘Interested in Oil and Gas Sector’
A Russian trade delegation made a low-key visit to Burma this week
led by Deputy Minister for Trade and Industry Georgy Kalamanov.
The delegation met Minister for Energy Aye Myint to discuss “bilateral cooperation in the industrial sector,” The New Light of Myanmar reported.
It’s understood from embassy sources in Bangkok that the Russians are
interested in investing in Burma’s onshore and offshore oil and gas
business development as well as heavy construction projects.
Several small privately owned Russian firms are already engaged in
some onshore projects in enhanced recovery programs in old oil fields in
central Burma.
However, Russia has considerable experience in offshore exploration
and production, especially of gas. Two state-owned Russian firms—Gazprom
and Zarubezhneft—have been involved in helping to develop Vietnam’s
offshore oil and gas resources.
Luxury Cars, Condos, Jewelery on Sale in Naypyidaw
A curious trade show will take place in Naypyidaw next week, offering
a wide range of goods and services from jewelery to farm tractors to
luxury cars.
The Naypyidaw Expo and Car Show, from Dec. 12 to 16, will involve 300 companies, according to the organizers.
Held in the isolated capital with a small population, observers question who the mostly luxury goods will be aimed at.
On offer will be medicines, furniture, condominiums and cosmetics—as
well as agricultural equipment, machinery and car accessories.
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