The Chinese government will resist pressure from
overseas investors in China's water industry for rapid rises in
domestic water rates, saying poorer households need time to adjust,
according to a senior policy official.
Qin Hong, deputy director of the Ministry of
Construction policy research center, said the government would have
to subsidize low-income families to cover the cost of water
utilities, if prices rose.
Qin said the average charge for each ton of water
consumed in major cities was 1.34 yuan (17 US cents), more than ten
times the rate in 1988.
The country began building water treatment facilities
nationwide in the 1990s to protect the water resources from
pollution, this increased the cost of the potable water supply as
well.
More than 60 percent of urban households spent three
to four percent of their monthly disposable income on water
charges, already nearing the upper limit of their affordability.
The income of these households was below the national average of
975 yuan (US$81) per month in 2006, Qin told the 2007 China Water
Congress in Beijing.
On the other hand, domestic and foreign industrial
representatives attending the congress expressed great concern over
the profit potential of their investments in the water industry,
saying the undervalued price would eat into their investment
returns.
The government was caught in between being pressured
to raise prices to guarantee proper returns and the pressure from
providing affordable water to low-income families, she
said.
However China's water industry, despite its slim
profit margins, was still a promising sector, said Zhao Wei, deputy
chief engineer with Singapore-based Hyflux Newspring Construction
Engeneering Co., Ltd., which operates waste water treatment plants
and desalination projects in Jiangsu, Hebei, Liaoning and Shandong provinces.
The government was working on industrial policies to
support the cross-regional development of more efficient,
large-scale water treatment facilities, and to avoid construction
of small enterprises with higher operating costs, said
Qin.
(Xinhua News Agency April 20, 2007)
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