Dec 02, 2008 at 02:16 AM
Company Home
Home arrow China Pharma News arrow China Chemical News arrow China to Shut Factories to Cut Air Pollution Before Olympics
Home
Advanced Search
China Biotech News
China Pharma News
China Chemical News
China Companies
Web Homepage
Statistics
Visitors: 223762
Who's Online
We have 26 guests online
China to Shut Factories to Cut Air Pollution Before Olympics
Written by Bloomberg   
Feb 15, 2008 at 08:01 PM

By Christian Schmollinger and Irene Shen

Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) -- China will shut coal-fired power plants, cement factories and chemical manufacturers near Beijing to reduce pollution before the Olympic Games in August.

Operators of these sites have been told they will be closed 30 days before the Olympics begin Aug. 8 in Beijing, said energy newsletter publisher Platts, citing unidentified people. Ten ``major polluters'' have already been shut and more than 15,000 old buses and taxis in both Beijing and Tianjin have been pulled off the streets, the State Environmental Protection Administration said in a statement on its Web site dated Feb. 1.

``The Olympics are the main theme this year so all the companies will go in line with the government's directives on the environment,'' said Zhou Xizeng, an equity analyst who covers steel companies at Citic Securities Co. in Beijing. ``Summer is a good time to cut supply because it isn't a peak season traditionally.''

China's hosting of the Olympics will showcase an economy poised to become the biggest contributor to global growth this year, and which is the world's largest consumer and producer of both steel and coal. With the expansion has come high levels of smog that has Olympic officials seeking promises of cleaner air and athletes threatening to skip the Games.

Haile Gebrselassie, the men's marathon world record holder, said that while he will attend the Aug. 8-24 Games, he may pull out at the starting line if conditions aren't safe enough, the South China Morning Post reported Feb. 5. ``If pollution is a serious problem I will not run,'' the newspaper quoted the 34- year-old Ethiopian, who has respiratory problems, as saying.

Shougang Cuts Production

China's Shougang Corp., parent of the only publicly traded steelmaker based in Beijing, will cut production by 4 million metric tons this year, it said last month. The country's second- biggest producer of construction-grade steel is building a 67.7 billion yuan ($9.4 billion) plant in the northern province of Hebei as it moves operations out of Beijing to help reduce pollution in the capital.

The government said in May it would spend 25 billion yuan last year on environmental projects for the first Olympics to be held in the world's most-populous nation.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao in November said his country will cut energy consumption by 20 percent over the next five years. The U.S. and China in December signed an agreement to ensure imports and exports meet environmental protection laws and have pledged to work together to promote alternative fuel technologies for automobiles.

China's environmental protection agency leads a working group, the Beijing 2008 Olympic Air Quality Supervision Group, set up in November, 2006 to oversee efforts to address pollution before the Olympics. The group said it planned to close and restrict production at some polluting steel and coal-power plants in Beijing, Tianjin and four neighboring provinces.

The industrial and power plants that will be shut probably won't be allowed to reopen until after the Games end on Aug. 24, Platts reported.

``The restricted production may boost the steel price in the short term but not much,'' said Zhou.

The air quality supervision group didn't identify which polluters have been closed. It also said less-polluting gasoline is now being provided in Beijing.

To contact the reporter on this story:

Christian Schmollinger in Singapore at ;

Irene Shen in Shanghai at

<Previous   Next>
Latest News