In a bid to curb overheated investment, the State Council has
given local governments one month to report new industrial projects
that have been approved against national rules.
The ultimatum aims to halt some projects that fail to meet
industry policies, land and credit approval procedures and
environmental regulations, said Zhang Zhiqiang, a senior official
in charge of fixed-assets investment with the National Development
and Reform Commission (NDRC), the top economic planner.
The commission on Friday unveiled the central government
circular, which ordered local authorities to self-examine projects
launched between January and June. Local authorities should report
their final results by the end of August.
"We are going to punish those involved in malpractices," said
Zhang, deputy director of the commission's Department of Fixed
Assets Investment.
Zhang said that projects with overseas investment should also be
examined as domestic ones.
According to the circular, the review covers every project with
an investment of more than 100 million yuan (US$12.5 million). For
steel mills, cement factories, vehicle assembly plants, power
stations and aluminum smelters, the benchmark is 30 million yuan
(US$3.7 million).
NDRC spokesman Han Yongwen said excessive investment in fixed
assets remains a large problem for the economy.
Nearly 100,000 new projects began in the first six months of
this year, 20,000 more than during the same period last year. The
investment spree pushed China's economy to grow by 10.9 percent
during the period, the highest rate since 1995.
The sizzling investment rise has resulted in excessive use of
land and credit loans. Government figures showed that loans reached
2.14 trillion yuan (US$268 billion) in the first half, accounting
for 85.7 percent of the government's whole-year budget.
A sample survey by the commission also found 40 percent of the
new projects have violated regulations on land use, environmental
impact assessment or approval procedures.
In the meantime, although the government planned to cut energy
consumption per unit of GDP by 4 percent from that of 2005, the
actual figure rose by 0.8 percent in the first half of the
year.
The central government is worried about the fast growth and
rising energy use, with Premier Wen Jiabao recently urging all
local governments and officials to "unify thinking and action" in
curbing the trend.
(China Daily August 5, 2006)