City officials stopped about 1,300 companies from
entering the heart of this booming southern city's manufacturing
sector in the first 10 months of this year because of the
environmental and energy problems they would have
caused.
Shenzhen has been struggling to overcome shortages of
land, water and energy resources, as well as problems associated
with an expanding population and worsening environmental
conditions, said Li Wenlong, director of Baoan District.
Shenzhen is also in the process of restructuring its
industrial sector in a bid to attract more high-tech companies. As
a result, some 1,260 companies failed to get licenses or moved out
of Baoan district during the January-October period, he
said.
Li's district is home to more than half of the city's
manufacturers and contributes about a third of its industrial
output.
Baoan District's industrial output increased by 29.5
percent in the first 10 months of this year compared with the same
period last year, while its fiscal income grew by 37.6 percent
during the period, according to official figures.
To speed the transformation of its industrial sector,
Shenzhen is in the process of weeding out certain types of
enterprises to make room for high technology and other value-adding
firms.
Specifically, the government is targeting illegally
operating, unlicensed companies; companies with safety problems;
companies that violate the Labor Law and social insurance policy;
companies that heavily pollute the environment; and
energy-intensive processing firms that rely on cheap
labor.
Companies that fall into these categories will be shut
down if they do not make improvements.
A spokesman for the Shenzhen Labor Bureau told China
Daily that the government would resettle and compensate any
laid-off workers, though he declined to provide any further
details.
For its part, the Baoan District government has
focused more on regulating the enterprises operating there in the
past year, allowing only qualified companies to receive operating
licenses and build new facilities, Li said.
The district government has worked out policies to
help those companies that are willing to relocate, Li
said.
(Xinhua News Agency November 29, 2006)
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