日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区

   
Water Urged to Tap Foreign Investment
 

China is expected to allow foreign investors to pump money into its water infrastructure to tackle shortages that could get worse in future years.

The sector has previously been a State monopoly.

In Chengdu, capital of Southwest China's Sichuan Province, a foreign-owned water project called Vivendi Waterworks will begin supplying tap water in March 2002.

More foreign investors are expected to follow Vivendi, a move which is being encouraged by the Chinese Government.

The government hopes they will invest in BOT (build, operate and transfer) schemes, which mean a company builds and operates projects and then transfers them to Chinese firms.

Similar foreign-funded projects are under way in Tianjin and Beijing, which shows water treatment and supply are becoming attractive to foreign investors.

Wang Yuqing, vice-minister of the State Environmental Protection Administration, said yesterday the country badly needed advanced water treatment technology, new management structures and more capital.

Wang was briefed about the country's current policies at the four-day Third China International Exhibition for Water Treatment Technology & Equipment, or China Water 2000, which opened yesterday in Beijing.

The Chinese Government will invest heavily to solve water supply shortages and water pollution during its 10th Five-Year Plan period (2001-05), said Han Deqian, vice-minister of science and technology.

China has long had serious water shortages. There is only 2,400 cubic meters of water per person in the country, one fourth the world's average level.

Low water prices and poor treatment facilities have aggravated the problems.

"People in China think water is a natural resource which needs not be paid for," said Karl Zhang, of France-based Vivendi Water, one of the world's top companies in this field.

He believed the introduction of competition would promote more efficient use of water and lead to cheaper and more effective water treatment.

However, few BOT projects have so far been set up in China and Zhang complained the former public service was difficult to get in to.

Wang said Chinese local authorities had not fully recognized the urgency of opening the water sector, which had for decades been run by the government as a State monopoly.

Michael Smart, general manager of the Vivendi Chengdu Waterworks Co Ltd said the project would give the company a good name not just profits.

He said foreign capital in the water supply field could help Chinese local governments solve their problems in this area.

"We will try various forms acceptable to the government to develop our business in this promising market," he said.


(China Daily 08/10/2000)


 
   
return...
   
(C) China Internet Information Center E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-68996214/15/16

主站蜘蛛池模板: 清水县| 济南市| 万宁市| 桐庐县| 武乡县| 普兰店市| 奇台县| 封开县| 新化县| 叶城县| 昂仁县| 集安市| 拜城县| 秦皇岛市| 阆中市| 南安市| 聂荣县| 彰武县| 西华县| 吴桥县| 周口市| 叶城县| 洪洞县| 邳州市| 吉水县| 厦门市| 延寿县| 广丰县| 湖口县| 平谷区| 隆化县| 卓尼县| 普兰县| 衡阳市| 黄山市| 红安县| 枝江市| 勐海县| 银川市| 随州市| 米林县|