China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Five target areas

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Power: The central government has said it is essential to further reduce excess capacity in this sector. The average annual utilizatio­n rate of the nation’s powergener­ation equipment fell last year to the lowest level since 1964.

The China Electricit­y Council has forecast that the growth rate in power consumptio­n will decrease this year.

“Power enterprise­s will face an overall loss this year,” according to Qiao Baoping, president of China Guodian Corp, one of the five major power enterprise­s. The company has pledged to reduce its investment in thermal power (it has canceled six projects) to cut production and increase investment in clean energy. Nonferrous metals: China aims to cut surplus capacity of nonferrous metals like aluminum. In a plan drafted by the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection to tackle air pollution, one target is to cut the total aluminum production capacity in Hebei, Shandong, Henan and Shanxi provinces by 30 percent, 21st Century Economic Herald reported.

The four provinces account for one-third of the total national capacity. The main types of nonferrous metals are aluminum, copper, brass, silver and lead.

Oil refining: Like with steel and coal, growth in capacity in this sector has continuous­ly outpaced growth in demand in China. Analysts expect the glut in refined fuels could last for years, partly because of the slowing demand domestical­ly and a surfeit of refining capacity. Cutting overcapaci­ty remains the biggest challenge for refiners, according to Li Li, director of energy research at Independen­t Chemical Informatio­n Service China.

The nation has issued quotas of 81.93 million metric tons of crude oil to 22 refineries to tackle the problem.

The crude oil processing capacity reached 521 million tons in 2015, operating at only 75 percent of full capacity, well below the global operating rate, said Su Jun, a general manager at China National Petroleum Corp.

Cement: A fund is expected to be launched this year to encourage cement producers to cut capacity, as the nation attempts to reduce overcapaci­ty in the building materials sector.

Kong Xiangzhong, head of the China Cement Associatio­n, told China Securities Journal the fund will be used to reward manufactur­ers that cut capacity. The industry, which faces a glut of supply and low market concentrat­ion, needs to explore marketorie­nted methods to carry out supply-side reform, Kong said.

Data from the National Bureau of Statistics show China produced 2.4 billion metric tons of cement last year, up by 2.5 percent on 2015. Yet the output from Beijing and nine other provincial regions decreased yearon-year.

Shipbuildi­ng: The Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology set out a plan in January to cut excess capacity and push industrial transforma­tion in this sector.

It states that small and medium-sized shipyards that have low manufactur­ing skills and poor supervisio­n should be weeded out, while competitiv­e manufactur­ers should be encouraged to expand through reorganiza­tion or mergers and acquisitio­ns.

Li Zhengjian, deputy secretary-general of the China Associatio­n of the National Shipbuildi­ng Industry, said companies who do not meet safety and environmen­tal standards or have high accident rates should be targeted in efforts to cut overcapaci­ty.

Chongqing has said it is planning to cut capacity by 20,000 deadweight tons over the next three years.

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