A private company's acquisition of the State-owned Luoding
Railway Corp will allow for the construction of the Luoding-Cenxi
railway to resume, giving a much-needed boost to the economy of
western Guangdong Province.
Shenzhen-based Zhongji Industrial Corp, in which the State has
only a minor share, signed an agreement on Monday with Luoding
Yongsheng Assets Management Corp to acquire Luoding Railway Corp
for 41.86 million yuan (US$5.16 million).
The agreement was signed on the condition that the Shenzhen firm
would take over all of Luoding's debts worth 846 million yuan
(US$104.32 million), and would secure an 84-per-cent stake in a
62-kilometer stretch of railway from Chunwan to Luoding.
In an interview yesterday, Zhongji President Cheng Qingbo said
that the acquisition will benefit both his company and Luoding.
"For Zhongji, as well as winning the massive project to extend
the railway to Cenxi in Southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous
Region, the deal will enable our firm to profit from transportation
and other logistics services," he said.
"And for Luoding Railway Corp, the deal will rid it of its huge
debts and make the construction of the railway extension project a
possibility."
Citing the outcome of a study by a design institute of the
Ministry of Railways, he said that Zhongji would be able to achieve
a return on its investment in about 11 years.
And the company will benefit from growing business opportunities
when the extension project is completed in three years' time.
The Chunwan-Luoding railway opened in 2000. Ever since, the
railway has been suffering from the inadequate levels of freight
transport.
Construction of the Luoding-Cenxi line will require a total
investment of 1.5 billion yuan (US$184.96 million), 65 percent of
which will come from bank loans, he said.
Liang Renqiu, an official from the Luoding municipal government,
said that Zhongji's involvement in the local railway projects would
help boost local economic development when the railway extension is
linked with the national network.
As a result, construction of the second-phase project of the
Yuelong Power Plant will be made possible, the official said, and
the transportation of local minerals including manganese, iron ore,
stones and coal will no longer suffer from bottlenecks.
Liang said that the local fiscal revenue is expected to grow by
30 percent when the railway line becomes operational.
(China Daily August 25, 2006)
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