The Borneo Post

Hong Kong’s rural hinterland could hold key to chronic land crunch

- By James Pomfret, Farah Master

HONG KONG: Hong Kong’s government says it needs to build billions of dollars’ worth of artificial islands to give the city’s glittering skyline room to grow, but critics say developers are hoarding unused land that could solve the problem.

Hong Kong’s leader, Carrie Lam, estimates the 1,111-squarekilo­metre city needs another 1,200 hectares, or about 12 square kilometres, and has proposed creating new land offshore.

Her plan, which would cost up to US$64 billion, could exhaust half of the financial hub’s sizeable financial reserves.

But major developers, including Henderson Land, New World Developmen­t and Sun Hung Kai Properties , are sitting on “no less than 1,000 hectares” of agricultur­al land, according to government estimates.

None of the three developers would clarify exactly how much rural land they hold, either directly or through shell companies. Two declined to comment on their plans for it or why they were sitting on the land.

Sun Hung Kai said it has been working to convert its agricultur­al land for “appropriat­e developmen­ts to help address the shortage of developabl­e land and housing in Hong Kong,” but offered no examples.

Holding onto the land until it is rezoned for private developmen­t is potentiall­y lucrative. Property prices have more than doubled in the last decade, and many city centre private flats sell for at least US$25,000 per square foot.

Augustine Ng, a former senior government town planning official for nearly three decades, is sceptical the city and developers are doing all they can.

He argues that taking over agricultur­al land held by developers using a powerful colonial-era ordinance would meet the city’s land needs many times over. “In a way, the developers are holding Hong Kong for ransom,” he said. ‘Business secret’ Ng, who recently wrote a detailed proposal on solving Hong Kong’s land woes, says developers conceal their acquisitio­ns through shell companies and middle men, then sit on the land, betting prices will rise.

“There’s no way you can identify who owns the land ... This is a business secret,” he said. “I would not be surprised if they each own 1,000 hectares.”

Groups including Liber Research, an NGO advocating equitable land usage, have investigat­ed hundreds of such shell companies, finding some shareholde­rs to be senior staff of big developers.

The government gave no direct response to a Reuters inquiry on whether it had looked into developers’ rural land holdings.

A Task Force on Land Supply, including senior officials, academics and experts, has spent more than a year analysing how to resolve the land crunch but has only a “rough estimate” of such land banks.

“We do have a shortage of land,” task force chairman Stanley Wong said. “And this has (been) jeopardizi­ng the developmen­t of Hong Kong in the past 10 or 15 years.”

The task force concluded in a recent report that far more than 1,200 hectares were needed. It supported the artificial islands, converting former industrial “brown field” sites in Hong Kong’s less-developed northern regions, called the New Territorie­s, and developing part of a golf course that is home to rare trees and wildlife.

Yet it was lukewarm on taking developers’ rural holdings, given the risk of protracted legal disputes and protests.

Instead it strongly endorsed teaming up with developers, who would help build public housing in exchange for developmen­t rights on rural sites, while the government would provide costly infrastruc­ture like roads.

The proposal has stoked accusation­s that authoritie­s are ceding power and profits to developers, according to some politician­s, land rights groups and experts. The result, they say, would be lower public housing density and more private flats.

Hong Kong provides public housing to more than 2 million people for an average monthly rent of US$230 per household. Land laws Before Hong Kong returned from British to Chinese rule in 1997, the colonial administra­tion often deployed a powerful “land resumption” ordinance to take property for public use, offering compensati­on to landowners.

In this manner, the city built mini metropolis­es called “new towns” in the New Territorie­s that have housed millions, many in public flats.

The Developmen­t Bureau told Reuters in a email that it planned to take back about 500 hectares of private land for a “public purpose” in coming years.

Since 1997, however, new towns have all but stalled amid a freeze on public housing and a scaling back of land supplies - both meant to prop up real estate prices.

Those policies made Hong Kong homes among the world’s most expensive. In a city of 7.4 million, the average wait time for public housing is 5.5 years, and the average living space for households is 430 square feet. All land in Hong Kong is government owned and leased to buyers.

“The chief executive has not got a policy which takes hold of the land which is, and could be, available,” said Leo Goodstadt, a former head of Hong Kong’s Central Policy Unit, who last year addressed the issue in a book, “A City Mismanaged.”

“This is the most serious problem in Hong Kong,” he added. — Reuters

 ??  ?? An aerial view shows plots of land in Hong Kong’s rural New Territorie­s in Hong Kong on Nov 22, 2018 in this handout photo taken with a drone. — Liber Research Community/Handout via Reuters
An aerial view shows plots of land in Hong Kong’s rural New Territorie­s in Hong Kong on Nov 22, 2018 in this handout photo taken with a drone. — Liber Research Community/Handout via Reuters
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