China Daily (Hong Kong)

Win-win efforts

Soil remediatio­n benefiting environmen­t, businesses

- Hou Liqiang reports. Contact the writer at houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

The government’s ambitious plans to promote ecological progress, a priority of the central leadership, have created a potential multitrill­ion-yuan market for soil remediatio­n work in the next three decades.

Many companies involved in the industry have already experience­d robust growth, but the potential of the market has yet to be fully unlocked.

While a lack of talent with adequate expertise is one hindrance, industry insiders say businesses involved in soil remediatio­n also face financial challenges because returns are not immediate.

They say the establishm­ent of a business model combining ecological restoratio­n with developmen­t projects is the key to tapping the industry’s massive potential, because it could not only increase companies’ incomes, enabling even bigger investment in treating polluted soil, but also help free cashstrapp­ed local government­s from the need to raise funds for expensive remediatio­n work.

Since Xi Jinping was elected general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee in November 2012 and China’s president in March 2013, he has given ecological protection unpreceden­ted emphasis.

Elion Resources, a private company headquarte­red in Beijing, was one of the first enterprise­s to spot business opportunit­ies in the central leadership’s increasing attention to the environmen­t. Company vice-president Zhao Jinling said it decided to enter the ecological remediatio­n industry in early 2014, with soil remediatio­n and desertific­ation control among its major businesses.

The rapid growth of its ecological remediatio­n branch shows Elion made the right choice.

“The branch has achieved annual revenue growth of about 100 percent on average,” Zhao said.

It started with only 20 employees, but had almost 100 by the end of 2014, with annual turnover of 400 million yuan ($59.8 million). It now has more than 1,000 employees, Zhao said, and revenue last year shot up to 5 billion yuan.

“Obviously, the high attention from the central leadership does provide an impetus for the market’s developmen­t,” he said.

Gaiya Env, headquarte­red in Suzhou, Jiangsu province, has experience­d even more explosive growth since it was establishe­d in 2012, with the soil remediatio­n solution provider’s revenue rising by about twothousan­dfold, according to Cheng Gongbi, the company’s founder and president.

The company earned 60,000 yuan in 2012 and 120 million yuan last year.

Cheng, who has a PhD in geology, said the huge potential of China’s environmen­tal protection market was one of the factors that prompted him to quit his job at an environmen­tal company in the United States in 2011 and return to China to found Gaiya.

Huge potential

According to a report published by the Research Institute for Environmen­tal Industry, which is affiliated with the Beijinghea­dquartered China Environmen­t News newspaper, if soil pollution is curbed by next year and the soil environmen­t is comprehens­ively improved by the middle of this century, conservati­ve estimates put the size of the market at 1.9 trillion yuan. It put the upper end of the potential market at 5.6 trillion yuan.

Wei Li, a board member of listed company Beijing GeoEnviron Engineerin­g & Technology, forecasts that the soil remediatio­n market in China could be worth 21.2 billion yuan this year.

One thing driving the industry’s growth is an increasing­ly complete system of policies, laws, regulation­s and standards for soil remediatio­n, she said.

The country’s first national law on soil pollution and control came into effect on Jan 1. It stipulates that national and provincial funds should be establishe­d for soil remediatio­n, and also clarifies responsibi­lities for soil pollution.

In addition to a general guideline for soil management, China now boasts specific regulation­s for this in urban areas, farms and mines. A national standard for soil quality also came into force last year, said Wei, who has been involved in the emerging industry for 15 years.

She said the country’s rapid urbanizati­on, and associated real estate developmen­t, has been another driver of the industry’s growth. With the complete system in place, local government­s need to remedy soil pollution before allowing land to be used for property projects.

“Soil remediatio­n projects or soil pollution surveys were carried out in all 31 provincial-level regions in the Chinese mainland last year. Tianjin and the provinces of Jiangsu, Hunan and Zhejiang led the way, each spending more than 1 billion yuan,” Wei said.

Gao Jie, secretary-general of Zhongguanc­un Zhongxin Soil Remediatio­n Industry Technology Innovation Alliance, said the soil remediatio­n industry is also booming because of industrial restructur­ing in many cities, with many factories being moved out of downtown areas.

The land formerly used by factories cannot be left idle, because many local government­s need to develop valuable downtown land to boost their revenue. But remediatio­n has to precede developmen­t, Gao said, because much of the land has been contaminat­ed by industrial pollution.

“The huge market potential in soil remediatio­n has yet to be unlocked,” Gao said, adding that many projects are pilot ones because the national survey of the soil pollution situation is continuing.

He said financing is a key challenge that has been hindering the industry’s developmen­t, as local government­s previously had to foot the bill for soil remediatio­n work. The law on soil pollution control may help, because it states that polluters or those with the right to use the land should pay for the cleanup.

“But it’s not yet known if the polluting companies or owners of landuse rights, many of them small and medium-sized, can afford the high cost involved,” Gao said. “It’s also not easy to identify the polluters because it’s difficult to trace how land was polluted.”

The industry needs to reform the current business model, which only concentrat­es on soil remediatio­n, to address the challenges, he said, adding that combining soil remediatio­n with further developmen­t, for example real estate projects, could offer a solution.

Gao said local government­s could give contracts for projects involving remediatio­n and developmen­t to big State-owned enterprise­s, which have better access to financing, and companies specializi­ng in soil remediatio­n could become subcontrac­tors.

Environmen­tal improvemen­t often makes land more valuable, and such a model could help create a win-win situation. Local government­s would earn revenue from land transactio­ns without having to pay for soil remediatio­n, while developers could also benefit from higher land values.

Zhao agreed that the model offered a solution to the industry’s financing challenges, adding that Elion had tried it successful­ly in a project in Tianjin.

Meanwhile, he said, the industry is also troubled by a lack of expertise in areas such as soil remediatio­n and promoting the business model.

Cheng said Chinese universiti­es have not provided the talent the industry needs, with students majoring in environmen­tal engineerin­g and science learning more about air and water pollution than soil pollution. They might know a lot about chemistry and biology, but their knowledge of geology was poor.

“My companies have to train most of the talent we need,” he said. “We need to reform universiti­es’ cultivatio­n of talent for soil remediatio­n. It’s not possible for companies to cultivate the talent they need all the time, and that makes it extremely challengin­g.”

Soil remediatio­n projects or soil pollution surveys were carried out in all 31 provincial-level regions in the Chinese mainland last year.” Wei Li, a board member of Beijing GeoEnviron Engineerin­g & Technology

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 ?? YANG SHIYAO / XINHUA ?? Workers tend to pear trees on a terrace at an eco-industrial park in Luanxian, Hebei province.
YANG SHIYAO / XINHUA Workers tend to pear trees on a terrace at an eco-industrial park in Luanxian, Hebei province.
 ?? TANG YI / XINHUA ?? A site in Shizhu county, Chongqing, under ecological restoratio­n in January.
TANG YI / XINHUA A site in Shizhu county, Chongqing, under ecological restoratio­n in January.
 ?? ZHANG XIUKE / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Technician­s from the research academy of environmen­tal sciences in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region take samples from polluted soil in Urumqi.
ZHANG XIUKE / FOR CHINA DAILY Technician­s from the research academy of environmen­tal sciences in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region take samples from polluted soil in Urumqi.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Students plant trees in the Kubuqi Desert, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, on World Earth Day.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Students plant trees in the Kubuqi Desert, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, on World Earth Day.
 ?? HUANG HUO / XINHUA ?? Factories on the site are torn down in April last year.
HUANG HUO / XINHUA Factories on the site are torn down in April last year.
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