China collected 10.1 billion yuan (US$1.26 billion) in terms of
natural resources tax in the first half of the year, up 46 percent
over the same period last year, according to a report in the
Economic Daily on Friday.
China raised natural resources tax rates in 2005 for a number of
resource products, a move aimed at ensuring that non-renewable
natural resources are utilized more effectively.
The current natural resources tax uses a fixed rate based on a
company's production and sales.
The country's energy industry paid 751.3 billion yuan (US$93.9
billion) in value-added tax from 2001 to 2005, increasing at an
annual average rate of 18.9 percent and accounting for 19.4 percent
of total domestic value-added tax revenue.
In 2005, the State Administration of Taxation readjusted natural
resources tax rates for coal in 12 provincial areas, as well as tax
rates on crude oil, natural gas and some other non-metal mineral
resources. The administration also adjusted tax rates for coal in
the country's five coal production areas in 2004.
With China's economy growing so rapidly, the demand for natural
resources is soaring.
However, Chinese businesses use resources inefficiently and
often fail to protect them. Official statistics show the average
recycling rate for the country's coal mines is about 40 percent,
with that of small mines down to as little as 15 percent.
(Xinhua News Agency August 12, 2006)