Taiwan business people on the mainland have reacted
enthusiastically to a unique new environment-friendly investment
opportunity.
In return for a three-year effort to reverse desertification and
improve the environment of an area of land, the investor will then
be given a 50-year lease to use the land for commercial purposes,
provided tough environment standards are met.
Over 10,000 hectares of wasteland near Da'an in northeast
China's Jilin Province have been earmarked for the
project.
The fee for the land is 6,000 yuan (US$740) per hectare.
To ensure a return on the investment, as well as a standard
environment protection subsidy, 5 percent of the land can be used
for commercial purposes.
"This is the first time Taiwan investors have been engaged in
the mainland's environmental protection efforts," said Luo Hongbin,
director of the Council for Taiwan Businessmen under the China
Society for Promotion of the Guangcai Programme, a project by
private entrepreneurs to help alleviate poverty.
He was confident that "this would help update the image of
Taiwan businessmen on the mainland, and help them develop their
businesses."
During a launch ceremony held at the State Forestry
Administration (SFA) in Beijing, officials confirmed that so far
127 Taiwan business people living on the mainland have been granted
such land-use certificates.
"This is one of the best land investment offers I've ever
encountered," investor Chin-Nen Huang said.
"I'm to turn about 667 hectares of wasteland into a big farm
growing grass for livestock," he said.
(China Daily May 18, 2006)