Oil and natural gas mining are the most profitable industries in
China in 2005, according to a study by the State Information Center
released Friday.
The results of the study, carried out by the China
Securities newspaper, show that oil and natural gas mining made
a profit of 292.7 billion yuan (about US$36 billion), up 68 percent
from 2004.
Refining and preliminary processing of base metals ranked second
among 39 industries analyzed by the research team headed by Fan
Jianping.
The third most profitable industry was the generation and supply
of electricity and fuel gas.
Others include the manufacturing of raw chemicals and chemical
products, manufacturing electronics and telecommunications
equipment, and manufacturing communications and transportation
equipment.
Manufacturing of electrical and machinery products,
manufacturing of general equipment, coal mining and washing, and
textile are also among the industries that made the biggest profits
in 2005.
The study indicates that energy industries such as oil and coal
mining will continue to be one of the most lucrative sectors,
thanks to fierce competition in downstream industries, the
liberalization of domestic prices, the shutdown of smaller coal
mines, high global oil prices and the continued growth of the
Chinese economy.
The study painted a bleak, if not gloomy picture for industries
inflicted by huge surplus capacities. These include iron and steel,
electrolyzed aluminum, batteries and automobiles.
The machinery, electronics and telecommunications industries
will enjoy continued growth in 2006, driven by the need to upgrade
traditional industries, and the likely issuance of licenses for
third-generation mobile telecommunications services.
(Xinhua News Agency February 18, 2006)