China has raised the capital threshold for projects converting coal to liquid 
fuel to brake a possible overheating in the coal-chemical industry, as excessive 
development of the fossil fuel pollutes the environment and strains the water 
supply. 
On July 7, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), China's 
industrial watchdog, issued a circular requiring local governments to tighten 
control of new coal liquefaction projects before the national development 
program for the coal liquefaction industry is complete. 
The government will not approve coal liquefaction projects with an annual 
production capacity under three million tons, said the Commission circular. 
One ton of coal-to-oil processing capacity needs an investment of 10,000 yuan 
(1,250 U.S. dollars). Thus the three-million-ton annual capacity means an 
investment of 30 billion yuan, an astronomical figure for most enterprises, said 
Li Dadong, an academician with the Chinese Academy of Engineering. 
"The move aims to contain possible overheating and ensure a healthy 
development of the coal liquefaction industry across the country," he said. 
The world's largest producer of coal, China fuels about 70 percent of the 
energy needs for itself. 
Constantly rising oil prices have prompted the coal chemical industry to try 
to find alternatives for petroleum in China, the world's fourth-largest economy. 
The recent oil rally toward 80 U.S. dollars a barrel has further spurred a wave 
of coal liquefaction projects. 
Coal liquefaction is a process that converts coal from a solid state into 
liquid fuels, usually to provide substitutes for petroleum products. Coal 
liquefaction processes were first developed in the early part of the 20th 
century but later application was hindered by the relatively low price and wide 
availability of crude oil and natural gas. 
Large-scale applications have existed in only a few countries, such as 
Germany during World War II and South Africa since the 1960s. The oil crises of 
the 1970s and the threat of depletion of conventional oil supplies sparked a 
renewed interest in the production of oil substitutes from coal during the 
1980s. However, the wide availability of inexpensive oil and natural gas 
supplies in the 1990s effectively ended the near-term commercial prospects of 
these technologies. 
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