"Is it possible for us to
own a coal mine? Will the township government allow it?" Jin Yu, in
a village in the Lüliang Mountains of north China's Shanxi
Province, was doubtful even after her husband paid 10 million
yuan to the county government to become a township colliery's
owner.
An August 11 Nanfang Weekend report revealed
that Shanxi is drawing up a reform plan concerning the ownership of
its nearly 4,000 collieries. After paying certain mining fees,
contractors would be able to acquire and transfer mining rights the
state used to give to township, county or provincial
governments.
China, the world's largest coal producer and
consumer, is rich in deposits. Its reserves add up to 1 trillion
tons, mainly distributed in the north and northwest, Inner
Mongolia, Shaanxi and Shanxi in particular.
Shanxi is the country's no.1 coal producer with
verified reserves of 272.5 billion tons. It is among the world's
six biggest coal bases with an annual output of over 100 million
tons.
Nevertheless, behind these figures are rising
numbers of mine accidents with irrecoverable losses in lives and
property. Reformers hope the reforms will help reduce wastage and
accidents, which have been blamed on undetermined colliery
ownership.
The new plan was piloted last year in Linfen City
and Zhongyang County of Lüliang City, sparking widespread debate.
As early as 1996, the revised Mineral Resources Law already
stipulated that both prospecting and mining rights could be
acquired with payment. However, in the following five years only
270 or so transfers took place.
According Shanxi Provincial Department of Land and
Resources, in the first half of this year the National Development
and Reform Commission, State Environmental Protection
Administration, State Administration of Work Safety and ministries
of finance, land and resources, and labor and social security
jointly established a task force in charge of coal resources
management.
It decided to continue the pilot in Datong and
Yangquan in the latter half of the year, extend it next year
throughout the province and Inner Mongolia and Shaanxi, and roll it
out nationwide in 2007.
Pilot project in Linfen
At a working conference on July 21, 52-year-old
Miao Yuanli, vice mayor of Linfen, summarized the pilot that was
set up after an explosion at Liangjiahe Coalmine in Linfen's Xixian
County killed 36 miners on April 30, 2004.
Besides safety problems, unclear ownership has
resulted in a huge waste of resources. Shortsighted contractors
often don't pay any attention to a mine's sustainable development.
"We're just contractors; of course we dig where it's easy and where
high-quality coal is," said one of them.
In most Shanxi collieries the rate of recovery is
30-40 percent; while in township mines it is between 10 and 15
percent, meaning 85 to 90 tons of raw coal will be lost after
digging up 10 to 15 tons.
After the Liangjiahe accident, all collieries in
Shanxi were ordered to stop production to improve working
conditions. In May the provincial government publicized a set of
reforms and chose Linfen as the place where the experiment was to
be held.
The government hoped ownership transfer would
encourage colliery owners to increase investment in safety
production and raise the rate of recovery.
In the first two months, not one of the city's 563
collieries responded, Miao said, and coal output remained zero.
Resistance mainly came from mine contractors who did not want to
pay additional fees.
Miao held 14 rounds of talks with leaders of 14
coal-producing counties, and the deadlock was finally broken by the
end of July when Dian'eryuan Coal Mine in Yicheng County took the
lead in paying the money and resuming production, after which other
contractors followed suit.
Price issue
Land and resources departments said Shanxi
currently has 4,018 coal mines. Over 3,000, all township or village
enterprises, were established in the 1980s. Though forbidden by
law, in the past decade or so they have been contracted out by
local governments for different time periods; some have been
sub-contracted several times.
After weighing the odds, both Linfen and Zhongyang
chose to transfer coal mine ownership. Only when contractors
refused to take it over would a colliery be auctioned. This method
met support from Xiao Geng, an assistant professor at the
University of Hong Kong's School of Economics and Finance.
Qian Pingfan, a research fellow with the State
Council's Development Research Center, questioned negotiated
transfer fees, saying auctions introduce competition and attract
better prices.
In the beginning, Miao Yuanli objected to fixing a
high price, since contractors would either not afford it or have no
more money to upgrade facilities and invest in safety
production.
But many pointed out that, as mineral resources are
bound to rise in value, sale at a fixed price would damage the
state in the long run.
In the province's new implementation rules, the
original "once-and-for-all" deal has been changed to payment by
installments at an interval of five years based on a floating coal
price.
"We have nothing to use as reference for the
reforms. We have to take it one step at a time," said Zhu Jingxue,
director of Mine Management Division of Shanxi Provincial
Department of Land and Resources. "When drawing up the reform plan
we must take full consideration of the interests of the country,
governments at different levels, contractors, local villagers, and
so on."
Uncertainties
Many contractors remain skeptical about whether the
reforms can turn them into true mine owners. They are not sure if
the new methods are just an act of expediency, or herald the
marketization of mine ownership.
"In this sector there have been too many things we
cannot control, or even choose," sighed a 36-year-old contractor
surnamed Cheng of Wenzhou in Zhejiang Province. Since 2002 he
contracted four collieries in Datong and Xinzhou. Though paying
over 2 million yuan for the mines in Datong, he still didn't get
the promised mining rights certificate.
Sources from land and resources departments said
that even in Linfen, where the project was first piloted, not a
single mine ownership transfer has been concluded.
The reform's ultimate goal is to create modern coal
enterprises. To achieve it, in the view of Xiao Geng, industrial
restructuring is necessary, which will deal with broader fields
like the transformation of government's supervisory and
administrative style and the establishment of a mediating mechanism
in case of disputes.
It has produced some initial encouraging effects.
For example, working conditions in Shenjiao Colliery have improved
remarkably, and new equipment costing 60 million yuan is expected
to raise the mine's recovery rate to 70 to 75 percent.
(China.org.cn by Shao Da, August 26, 2005)