A ticket to riches for bosses
By Jiang Zhuqing (China Daily) Updated: 2006-09-27 10:53
The central government announced only last week that more than 5,000
officials had admitted to illegally investing some 700 million yuan (US$87.5
million) in coal mines.
Some coal bosses said they have decided to shift
their investment to other industries, while others have begun to donate money to
local residents and public welfare projects with the aim of improving their
tarnished images.
Qin Peng, the owner of Nanping Coal Mine in Yangcheng
County in Shanxi, plans to invest 500 million yuan (US$62.5 million) in a local
scenic spot to help local residents earn money through tourism.
With an
annual production of 150,000 tons, Qin's coal mine is the only private colliery
in Jincheng that has completely updated its plant.
It has spent money
updating its power supply, transport network, and ventilation and water drainage
systems, all costing 60 million yuan (US$5.25 million).
The coal mine now
has a production capacity of more than 1 million tons a year, Qin
said.
In order to protect the interest of State assets in the coal mining
industry, Shanxi provincial government has introduced public auctions to sell
off coal resources, officials said.
Proved reserves of coal in Shanxi
amount to 270 billion tons, 96 billion of which have already been transferred to
collieries, statistics show.
And previously, coal mine owners had to pay
only low levels of taxation, reports said.
The first coal auction was
held in June, with 273.4 million yuan (US$33.7 million) paid for the
exploitation rights to seven coal mines bought from the Shanxi Provincial Land
and Resources Department.
A total of 16 coal bosses in the province won
the right to tap these coal mines, reports said.
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