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Fuel price hikes in Cambodia make life harder for local people

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Fuel price hikes in Cambodia make life harder for local people

2026-04-29 20:16 Last Updated At:04-30 11:26

Price hikes in Cambodia resulting from the global energy crisis have made local people's life more difficult.

Among Southeast Asian countries, Cambodia is the most severely affected by the fuel crisis triggered by the war in Iran.

It has neither domestic commercial oil production capability nor oil refinery, and even under normal conditions it has less than a month's supply of petrol, diesel, jet fuel, and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG).

The vast majority of the country's tuk-tuks which run on LPG have faced soaring prices.

"The fares for the ride-hailing apps we work with don't increase. They don't adjust in line with the rising gas prices. It's very hard to make a living. Even affording three meals a day is difficult, it's sometimes not enough," said Nov Hout, an LPG tuk-tuk driver.

Hout said some drivers have already switched to electric vehicles to save LPG costs.

Meanwhile, the sharp rise in the LPG price has compelled many Cambodians to abandon modern cooking methods and revert to traditional practices.

"We have to use firewood for cooking for the time being. It's just not as convenient as cooking with gas, but we must save money because gas is so expensive," said Chea Yon, a resident on Cambodia's Silk Island.

Cambodia relies heavily on road transportation, and rising fuel costs are driving up the price of all sorts of goods.

Farmers are not only feeling the pinch of rising fertilizer costs, but also pressures from fuel costs.

"We need to use a machine to pump water for irrigation, which requires a lot of fuel. The other day when we dug up ginger, we didn't make a profit at all. In fact, we lost money because fuel prices are so high," said Ra Hong, a farmer in Phnom Penh.

Fuel price hikes in Cambodia make life harder for local people

Fuel price hikes in Cambodia make life harder for local people

The United Nations said on Thursday that explosive ordnance contamination in the Palestinian Gaza Strip and the West Bank is a "daily emergency," warning that unexploded ordnance not only endangers civilian lives but also severely hinders humanitarian aid, community recovery and reconstruction efforts.

At a press conference, Julius Van Der Walt, chief of the UN Mine Action Programme in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, said the explosive ordnance contamination has worsened the already severe humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip.

"So since October 2023 in Gaza, more than 1,000 people, I think the latest figure is, more than 1,200 people, or on an average of one person every single day has been killed or injured by explosive ordnance. So of all the accidents that we have been able to verify and get more information about nearly half of those victims are children," he said.

He said current evidence shows an extremely high density of explosive ordnance contamination in Gaza. The UN Mine Action Service has identified nearly 1,000 dangerous items during missions requested by humanitarian partners alone. This is equivalent to encountering an explosive device every 600 meters, meaning that given Gaza's small geographic size, no community, child or family can avoid the threat.

Explosive ordnance poses 'daily emergency' in Gaza: UN

Explosive ordnance poses 'daily emergency' in Gaza: UN

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