Home>>Business
Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Thursday, June 20, 2002

China Seeks Foreign Investors for Sewage Treatment

The Chinese government has put out the welcome sign for foreign businesses prepared to help with a domestic headache -- sewage treatment.


PRINT DISCUSSION CHINESE SEND TO FRIEND


The Chinese government has put out the welcome sign for foreign businesses prepared to help with a domestic headache -- sewage treatment.

According to the Ministry of Construction's blueprint, all cities are required to establish waste water treatment facilities that process 45 per cent of sewage by 2005 and 60 per cent by 2010.

This means the daily capacity of Chinese urban sewage treatment plants is expected to more than double, providing great business opportunities for international companies and financial institutions.

Since 1998, the Chinese government has invested 200 billion yuan (24 billion U.S. dollars) annually in urban construction. However, domestic funding is far from enough and international capital is therefore badly needed.

Successful examples can be found with the World Bank and the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO). Sources with the ministry say that both have carried out a number of sewage treatment projects in China.

The 15 projects financed by the World Bank involve two billion U.S. dollars. UNIDO has promised to allocate 30 billion U.S. dollars to help sewage treatment in major Chinese cities in the next decade.

To attract more international investors, the Chinese government has set up favorable conditions in this field during the past decade.

French water company Vivendi is among early investors. It has successfully participated in projects involving tap-water transportation as well as waste water treatment in the cities of Shanghai, Tianjin and Qingdao.

Water pollution has become increasingly alarming in China as the urban population booms and urbanization expands. Although the country has made a lot of progress in waste water treatment, it can hardly catch up with economic development due to the industry's outdated systems and lack of funds.

Insiders maintain that recycling is a must for sustainable development. However, China's water recycling rate is around 40 per cent, as against 75-85 per cent in developed countries.

Beijing, host of the 2008 summer Olympic Games, has listed a batch of new projects concerning water treatment and recycling to improve its urban infrastructure. These projects are open to both domestic and international investors.

Meanwhile, places other than Beijing are determined to better urban living conditions. Beijing's neighboring Hebei Province alone has so far utilized foreign funds of more than 300 million U.S. dollars every year in sewage treatment


Questions?Comments? Click here
    Advanced






Shanghai Starts Building New Sewage Treatment Plants

China's Largest Sewage Treatment Factory to Be Run Privately

Major Sewage Treatment Plant Operational in N. China





 


Bill Clinton Has Unexpectedly Become a 'Sweet Cake' ( 15 Messages)

Englishman Hired as Chief Advisor of Yunnan Provincial Government ( 16 Messages)

Two S.Korean Girls Run Over by US Armored Vehicle ( 55 Messages)

Uncle Sam's Policy to Cross-Straits Ties against Its Own Interests ( 5 Messages)

Home-made Auto Sales Head for 3 Million in 2002 ( 8 Messages)



Copyright by People's Daily Online, all rights reserved