China is considering abolishing the preferential taxation policy
for imported copper sulphide concentrate starting on Jan. 1, 2006,
sources with the Ministry
of Commerce said on Wednesday.
The move aims to help cool down the overheated investment in the
copper industry, the sources said, predicting a drop in both the
export of refined copper and the demand for imported copper.
Under the preferential policy, copper smelteries could import
duty-free copper ores as long as their processed copper products
were designated for exports.
Copper prices in China jumped from US$1,779 per ton in 2003 to
US$3,328 per ton in the first half of this year.
The soaring prices have led the government to fear an investment
bubble, prompting the announcement last month that the government
would soon introduce a slew of measures to rein in the investment
in the copper smelting industry.
The fast expansion of copper smelting capacity has already
triggered vicious competition, which has brought down benefits to
the industry.
The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) warned recently that if
nothing is done, by the end of 2007, China will have an annual
copper smelting capacity of 3.7 million tons, far exceeding what
the country's copper concentrate resources supply can
guarantee.
(Xinhua News Agency November 17, 2005)