China's Policy on Mineral Resources
Foreword
I. The Present Situation of Mineral Resources and Their
Exploration and Exploitation
II. Targets and Principles for Mineral Resources Protection and Rational
Utilization
III. Increasing the Domestic Capability of Mineral Resources Supply
IV. Widening the Opening of, and Cooperation in, Mineral Resources Exploration
and Exploitation
V. Achieving the Coordinated Development of Mineral Resources Exploitation and
Environmental Protection
VI.
Improving the Management of Mineral Resources
Information Office of the State Council
of the People’s Republic of China
December 2003, Beijing
Foreword
Mineral resources are an important part of natural resources, and an important
material foundation for the development of human society. Great achievements
have been obtained in the survey and development of China’s mineral resources
in the past five decades since the founding of New China. A great number of
mineral resources have been verified, and a fairly complete system for the
supply of mineral products has been established, providing an important
guarantee for the sustained, rapid and healthy development of the Chinese
economy. At present, over 92% of the country’s primary energy, 80% of the
industrial raw and processed materials and more than 70% of the agricultural
means of production come from mineral resources.
China
attaches great importance to sustainable development and the rational
utilization of mineral resources, and has made sustainable development a
national strategy and the protection of resources an important part of this
strategy. Immediately following the UN Environmental and Development Conference
in 1992, the Chinese government took the lead in formulating the “China Agenda
21 — the White Paper on China’s Population, Environment and Development in the
21st Century.” It approved and implemented the “National Program on Mineral
Resources” in April 2001, and, in January 2003, began to implement “China’s
Program of Action for Sustainable Development in the Early 21st Century.”
To
build a well-off society in an all-round way is China’s objective in the first
20 years of the new century. China will depend mainly on the exploitation of
its own mineral resources to guarantee the needs of its modernization program.
The Chinese government encourages the exploration and exploitation of the
mineral resources in market demand, especially the dominant resources in the
western regions, to increase its domestic capability of mineral resources
supply. At the same time, it is an important government policy to import
foreign capital and technology to exploit the country’s mineral resources, make
use of foreign markets and foreign mineral resources, and help Chinese mining
enterprises and mineral products enter the international market. The Chinese
government holds that to have foreign mining companies enter China and Chinese
mining enterprises enter other countries to make different countries mutually
complementary in resources is of great significance for the common prosperity
and healthy development of world mineral resources prospecting and
exploitation.
I. The Present Situation of Mineral Resources and
Their Exploration and Exploitation
China has discovered 171 varieties of minerals, and 158 of them with proved
reserves. There are 10 energy-related minerals, including oil, natural gas,
coal, uranium and geotherm; 54 metallic minerals, including iron, manganese,
copper, aluminum, lead and zinc; 91 non-metallic minerals, including graphite,
phosphorus, sulfur and sylvite; and 3 liquid minerals, including groundwater,
and mineral water. There are nearly 18,000 mineral deposits in China, including
more than 7,000 big and medium-sized ones.
The
basic characteristics of China’s mineral resources are:
— The total quantity
of the resources is fairly big and there is a fairly complete variety of
minerals. China has found a rather complete variety of mineral resources, and a
fair abundance of mineral resources in total quantity. Large reserves have been
verified of major minerals, such as coal, iron, copper, aluminum, lead and
zinc. The country enjoys obvious advantages in the world in the resources of
coal, rare earths, tungsten, tin, molybdenum, antimony, titanium, gypsum,
bentonite, mirabilite, magnesite, barite, fluorspar, talc and graphite. There
are abundant geothermal and mineral water resources, and the quality of the
groundwater is good on the whole.
— The per-capita
quantity of the resources is small, and there is an imbalance between supply
and demand for some of the resources. The huge population and the low
per-capita quantity of mineral resources are a basic national condition in
China. The per-capita quantity of mineral resources held by the Chinese people
is at a comparatively low level by global standards. There are acute shortages
of diamonds, platinum, chromite and sylvite.
— Superior mineral
ores exist side by side with inferior ones. There are both high-quality ores
and those of low grade and complex constituents. The quality is fairly high for
tungsten, tin, rare earths, molybdenum, antimony, talc, magnesite and graphite,
while in the case of iron, manganese, aluminum, copper and phosphorus there is
an excess of low-grade ores, paragenous and associated ores and those
refractory for dressing and smelting.
— The resources with a
low degree of geological control account for a greater proportion of the
verified reserves of the mineral resources. In the structure of the verified
reserves of the resources, there are more resources, but less reserves or basic
reserves; more resource reserves with poor economic workability or with
uncertain economic significance, but less resource reserves with ideal economic
workability; more controlled and deduced resource reserves, and less verified
resource reserves.
— The conditions for
mineralization are good, and there are good prospects for finding more mineral
resources. There is a big potential for finding more oil, natural gas, gold and
copper. The deeper formations and outlying areas of the old mining areas and
the western regions are the major substitute areas of mineral resources.
China was one of the
first countries in the world to develop its own mineral resources. After the
founding of New China, the Chinese government made great efforts to strengthen
geological work, and explicitly demanded that this work should go ahead of the
economic construction. It formulated the strategic principle for “the
development of the mining industry” and made specific arrangements for the
exploration and development of mineral resources in all its five-year plans.
Great progress has been made in the exploration and exploitation of mineral
resources, so that China has gradually become a major country in mineral
resources and the mining industry. Mineral resources prospecting and
exploitation have supplied large quantities of energy and raw and processed
materials for economic construction; provided important sources of revenue;
accelerated the development of regional economies, especially economic
development in regions inhabited by the ethnic minorities as well as remote and
border areas; promoted the rise and growth of mining cities (townships) with
mineral resources exploitation as their pillar industry; and solved the problem
of employment for large numbers of local people, thus making a major
contribution to socio-economic development in the country.
— A large number of
mineral resources have been discovered and ascertained. The discovery and
construction of a large batch of oil and gas fields, represented by the Daqing
Oilfield, has turned China from an oil-poor country into one of major
oil-producing countries in the world. China has discovered or expanded a number
of major mineral deposits, including the rare-earth metal mine in Bayun Obo,
the Dexing Copper Mine, the Jinchuan Nickel Mine, the Shizhuyuan Tungsten Mine,
the Luanchuan Molybdenum Mine, the Ashile Copper Mine, the Jiaojia Gold Mine,
the Yulong Copper Mine, the Dachang Tin Mine, the lead-zinc mines at Changba
and Lanping, the Dongsheng-Shenmu Coalfield, the Zijinshan Copper-Gold Mine and
the Yangbajain Geothermal Field. It has also discovered and ascertained a
number of major sources of groundwater supply. Parts of the western regions
have gradually revealed good prospects for finding mineral resources. New
resources have been found in the outlying areas or deeper strata of some of the
existing mines. A succession of achievements has been made in the new round of
large-scale land and resources survey. The surveys of mineral resources over
the past 50 years and more have turned China from a country with uncertainty on
mineral resources to a country rich in mineral resources, from a country with
little-known groundwater resources to a country with groundwater playing a key
role in the national water supply. At the same time, China has fostered a large
contingent of geological surveyors with a fine tradition and working style, and
strong technical forces, who have made important contributions to economic
construction in China.
— The scale of mineral
resources exploitation has expanded rapidly. In 1949, China had just over 300
properly developed mines, producing annually about 120,000 tons of crude oil,
32 million tons of coal, 160,000 tons of steel, 13,000 tons of non-ferrous
metals, 10,000 tons of pyrite and less than 100,000 tons of phosphorus. Over
the past 50 years or more, China has evolved a large supply system for energy,
mineral products and other raw and processed materials, with the successful
construction of large petroleum-producing bases such as Daqing, Shengli and
Liaohe; large coal-mining centers such as Datong, Yanzhou, Pingdingshan,
Huainan, Huaibei and Junggar; large iron and steel production bases such as
Shanghai, Anshan, Wuhan and Panzhihua; large non-ferrous metal refining bases
such as Baiyin, Jinchuan, Tongling, Dexing and Gejiu; and large chemical mining
centers such as Kaiyang, Kunyang and Yunfu. The mushrooming of mining cities
has accelerated urbanization in the country. At present, China’s output and
consumption of mineral products rank among the biggest in the world. In 2002,
China had 489 large mines, 1,025 medium-sized ones, and well over 140,000 small
ones and sand and clay quarries, employing a total of 9.07 million people, with
the output value of the mining industry coming to 454.2 billion yuan. It
produced 167 million tons of crude oil and 32.7 billion cu m of natural gas.
The amount of mineral ores, and sand and clay excavated totaled 4.849 billion
tons, including 1.38 billion tons of raw coal, 231 million tons of iron ore, and
23.01 million tons of phosphorus ore; while the output of 10 non-ferrous metals
totaled 10.12 million tons. The output of raw coal, steel, 10 non-ferrous
metals and cement ranks first in the world; the output of phosphorus ore and
pyrite ranks second and third, respectively, and that of crude oil takes the
fifth place. The state-owned mining enterprises form the pillar of mineral
resources exploitation in China, and also the stable supply base for its energy
and raw and processed materials industries. The crude oil, natural gas and 36%
of the output of other mineral ores come from 7,679 state-owned mining
enterprises. The state-owned mining enterprises have not only laid the
foundation for industrial and agricultural development, but also made important
contributions to the improvement of the people’s living standards and the
growth of the comprehensive national strength. Since the mid-1980s, other types
of mining enterprises have also witnessed rapid development. There are now
140,000 non-state-owned mining enterprises, including 132 established with
investment from Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan businesses, and 160 with foreign
investment.
— The level of mineral
resources protection and rational utilization has been gradually raised. In the
past 50-odd years, China has made great progress in its use of geo-physical
exploration, geo-chemical exploration, remote-sensing, drilling and tunneling
technologies, laboratory test and computer technology for mineral resources
prospecting. It has raised the scientific and technological level of its
mineral resources exploration. Notable results have been obtained in the
multipurpose use and recovery of mineral resources, and the rate of resources
utilization has been gradually increased. At present, the recovery rate of scrap
steel in China is 40%, and the comprehensive recovery rate of scrap non-ferrous
metals is 27.70%. Supplies of practically all platinum-group and scattered
elements have come from the multipurpose use of mineral resources. Nearly one
third of the raw materials for sulfuric acid are also recovered in the
production of non-ferrous metals. Some of the coal mining enterprises produce
the coal-associated gas, oil shale, kaolin and high-alumina clay for
multipurpose development, and process and utilize coal gangue and flyash,
reaping good economic results and environmental benefits.
— Foreign trade in
mineral products has grown fast. China’s total volume of imports and exports of
mineral products, energy and raw and processed materials came to US$111.1
billion in 2002, accounting for 18% of China’s total volume of imports and
exports. Mineral products that were imported in large quantities included crude
oil, iron ore, manganese ore, fine copper ore and potash fertilizer. Meanwhile,
China exported large quantities of lead, zinc, tungsten, tin, antimony, rare
earths, magnesite, fluorspar, barite, talc, and graphite, and other leading
mineral products. China’s cooperation with other countries in the field of
mineral resources is expanding constantly. Through prospecting for offshore oil
and gas resources in cooperation with foreign companies, a number of new oil
and gas fields have been discovered, and the offshore oil and gas output has
grown year by year. Prospecting for and exploitation of oil and gas resources
in other countries have reached a certain scale. Prospecting for and
exploitation of hard rock mineral resources in other countries have also begun.
Relations of cooperation in long-term research and development in the field of
coal bed methane have been established with some countries.
However, there are
still some contradictions and problems in mineral resources survey and
development in China.
They are mainly:
— The contradiction
between the fast economic growth and the huge consumption of some mineral
resources. There is a fairly large gap between the supply and demand in oil,
high-grade iron, high-grade copper, fine-quality bauxite, chromite and sylvite.
The degree of difficulty in looking for mineral resources by geological means
in the eastern regions has increased, and the increase range of proved reserves
there has slowed down. The production in some mines has entered the middle or
late phase, and their reserves and output are decreasing year by year.
— Serious waste and
environmental pollution still exist in the exploitation and utilization of
mineral resources. The overall arrangements of the mining areas are not
satisfactory, and the prospecting and mining technologies are backward, and
there is still serious waste in the consumption of resources. The protection of
the environment of the mines calls for further improvement.
— Mineral resources
exploration and exploitation are imbalanced between regions. The western
regions and the outlying parts of the central regions abound in resources, but
their natural conditions are poor, their ecological systems are weak, and the
work of geological survey and assessment remains at a low level, thus
restricting the development of the resources.
— The degree of
market-oriented exploration and development of mineral resources is not high.
The market-oriented systems regarding the rights of prospecting for and
extracting of minerals should be further improved. Management of mineral
resources should be further improved and standardized. The scope of international
exchange and cooperation in the field of mineral resources should be further
broadened.
II. Targets and Principles for Mineral Resources Protection
and Rational Utilization
In the first 20 years of the 21st century, China will build a well-off society
in an all-round way, so the total demand for mineral resources will continue to
increase. China will strengthen its survey, prospecting, exploitation,
planning, management, protection and rational utilization of mineral resources,
implement the strategy of sustainable development, take a new road to
industrialization, and strive to increase the ability of the mineral resources
to guarantee its socio-economic development. China will continue to increase
the economic returns, social benefits and environmental benefits of the mineral
resources to the full by implementing an effective policy concerning mineral
resources in accordance with the requirements of surveying and exploiting
mineral resources in an orderly way and with compensation, striking a balance
between supply and demand, optimizing composition, and seeking intensive
development and high efficiency.
China’s
general targets for the protection and rational utilization of its mineral
resources in the early 21st century are:
—
To increase the ability of the mineral resources to guarantee the building of a
well-off society in an all-round way. We shall raise the effective input into
mineral resources prospecting and exploitation, increase the range and depth of
prospecting and exploitation, strengthen the protection of mineral resources,
and increase their supply. We shall open still wider to the outside world and
take an active part in international cooperation. We shall also establish a
reserve system for strategic resources, lay up necessary reserves of mineral
resources vital to the national economy and the people’s livelihood, and ensure
the safety of the country’s economy as well as the sustained and safe supply of
mineral commodities.
—
To promote the improvement of the ecological environment of the mines. We shall
reduce and control pollution and damage to the environment of the mineral
resources caused in the production links of mining, dressing and smelting or
refining and bring about a benign cycle in the exploitation of mineral
resources and protection of the ecological environment; improve the laws and
regulations for environmental protection in mining areas, and exercise still
stricter examination and supervision over the law enforcement concerning the
control of the ecological environment of the mines; and increase publicity and
education to raise the awareness of the mining enterprises and the whole
society regarding the importance of resources environmental protection.
—
To create a development environment for fair competition. In light of the
requirements for establishing a socialist market economic system and the
operation law governing mineral resources exploration and exploitation, we
shall further improve the laws and regulations concerning the management of
mineral resources; adjust and perfect the policy on mineral resources; improve
the investment environment; provide excellent information service; and create
an open, orderly, sound and unified market environment in which all market
subjects can compete on an equal footing.
To
attain the above targets, China will continue to adhere to the following
principles:
—
Persisting in the strategy of sustainable development. We shall implement the
measures for protecting resources and correctly handle the relations between
economic development and resources protection; exploit resources in the course
of protection and protect them in the course of exploitation; strengthen
mineral resources prospecting; exploit mineral resources in a rational way and
economize on their utilization; strive to increase efficiency in the
utilization of resources; and open a new road to industrialization featuring
high sci-tech content, good economic returns, low resources consumption, less
environmental pollution, and full play to the advantages of human resources.
—
Adhering to the orientation of reform toward establishing a market economic
system. Under the guidance of the state industrial policy and plan, we shall
give full play to the basic role of the market in the allocation of mineral
resources, and establish a mechanism for optimum resources allocation combining
government macro control with market operation. We shall strengthen control
over the total quantity of mineral resources exploitation, foster and
standardize the prospecting and mining rights market, promote the
diversification of mineral resources exploration, exploitation and investment
and the standardization of business operation, and earnestly safeguard the
legitimate rights and interests of the state owners and the holders of
exploration and mining rights.
—
Persisting in balanced development between regional mineral resources
prospecting and exploitation and environmental protection. We shall work out
unified plans and correctly handle the relations between eastern and western
regions, between well-developed and less-developed regions, between prospecting
and exploitation, between state-owned mining enterprises and non-state-owned
mining enterprises, and between scale exploitation and excavation by small
mines. We shall further implement the strategy of large-scale development of
the western regions, accelerate exploration and exploitation of mineral
resources in the western regions, especially the dominant minerals and minerals
in short supply at home, support mining towns and old mines in their search for
substitute resources, and promote the balanced development of regional
economies and the healthy development of mineral resources prospecting and
exploitation. We shall persist in combining mineral resources exploitation with
attention to the interests of the regions inhabited by ethnic minorities, and
strengthen the protection, restoration and control of the mining environment on
the principle of putting prevention first and combining prevention with
control.
—
Persisting in widened opening-up and cooperation with other countries. We shall
improve the investment environment, encourage and attract foreign investors to
prospect for and exploit mineral resources in China. We shall promote
international cooperation in mineral resources, and make such cooperation
mutually complementary and beneficial in accordance with the rules of the WTO
and international convention.
—
Persisting in making sci-tech progress and innovations. We shall implement the
strategy of rejuvenating the nation by reliance on science and technology;
strengthen efforts in tackling key technological problems and popularizing and
applying technological achievements in the investigation and assessment of
mineral resources and their prospecting and exploitation and multipurpose use
and in the prevention and control of environmental pollution in mining areas;
strengthen the R & D of high and new technologies involved in the
development of new energy sources, new material technologies and marine mineral
resources; and improve basic research on new theories, new methods and new
technologies. We shall improve the quality of the workers; train a contingent
of sci-tech personnel with mastery of advanced scientific theories and the
ability to make innovations in mineral resources prospecting and exploitation;
and promote the transformation of the prospecting and exploitation from a
traditional industry to a modern industry, from a labor-intensive industry to a
technology-intensive industry, and from extensive management to intensive management.
—
Persisting in managing mineral resources strictly according to law. We shall
improve the legal system, endeavor to promote administration according to law,
and exercise stricter supervision and control over mineral resources
prospecting and exploitation. We shall rectify and standardize the rules for
mineral resources management, and strive to advance mineral resources
protection and rational utilization along legal, standardized and scientific
lines.
III. Increasing the Domestic Capability of Mineral Resources Supply
China relies mainly on the development of its own mineral resources and other
natural resources to develop its economy. In the course of building a well-off
society in an all-round way, China will first of all increase its domestic
capability of mineral resources supply. China still has big potentials for
mineral resources prospecting and exploitation. It has discovered more than
200,000 mineral deposits and mineralized formations throughout the country. So
far, only some 20,000 of them have been explored and assessed. Since the 1980s,
72,000 mineralization abnormalities have been discovered, 25,000 of which have
been checked, resulting in the discovery of 217 mineral deposits. The unchecked
ones hold good prospects for mineral findings. The geological work is still at
a low level in the vast western regions and the outlying zones in the eastern
regions and the maritime areas under Chinese jurisdiction, and there are many
unknown areas. All these show the directions for the work of prospecting for
and exploiting domestic mineral resources in China in the future.
The
Chinese government, in accordance with the requirement for the establishment of
the socialist market economic system, has deepened the reform of the system for
mineral resources exploration, and carried out the public and basic geological
surveys and evaluation and the strategic exploration of mineral resources on
the one hand and the commercial exploration of mineral resources on the other
separately. In 1999, China set up the China Geological Survey, which organized
a new round of large-scale survey of the land and resources, and initiated a
basic exploration plan, a mineral resources prospecting and evaluation project
and a resources survey and utilization technological development project, with
the emphasis on the basic geological survey and the evaluation of the prospects
for mineral resources in regions with a low level of geological work,
especially the exploration and evaluation of the mineral resources potentials in
the western regions and the exploration and evaluation of mineral resources in
short supply, so as to provide a scientific basis for the planning work
regarding mineral resources and administrative decisions by the government, and
to furnish basic geological information regarding mineral resources for
commercial prospecting. The strategic prospecting for mineral resources with
government investment has attracted investment into commercial prospecting, and
a number of areas with prospects of mineralization have become hot spots for
commercial investment.
The
Chinese government encourages and gives active guidance to the commercial
prospecting that meets planning requirements, gears to market demands and
focuses on economic results. It encourages commercial prospecting in central
and western regions, remote and border regions and regions inhabited by ethnic
minorities, as well as other economically less-developed regions with resources
potentials. It encourages mining enterprises to carry out commercial geological
prospecting in the outlying areas or the deeper formations of old mines with
both market and resources potentials, and to find new substitute resources. It
encourages investors to acquire exploration and mining rights, through fair
competition, to sites of mineral deposits founded after prospecting with
government investment. It encourages commercial prospecting for oil, natural
gas, coal gas, coal with low ash and low sulfur contents, and fine-quality
manganese, chromium, copper, aluminum, gold, silver, nickel, cobalt, metals of
the platinum group, and sylvite. It also encourages the development of
geothermal, mineral water and groundwater resources, in a scientific,
economical and rational way, while encouraging the use of good-quality water
for better purposes, and the prevention and control of pollution.
China
will take the following measures to increase the domestic capability of mineral
resources supply:
—
Strengthen the exploration and exploitation of energy mineral resources. China
has an abundance of coal resources, and there will be no major changes in the
position of coal as China’s main energy source in the near future. However, the
energy structure with coal as its main source causes serious air pollution, and
some adjustments must be made to it. China will make full use of its coal and
hydro power resources, and develop cleaning technologies for coal, including
coal washing, dressing, liquefying and gasifying technologies. The scale of
coal production in the eastern regions will be stabilized, stress will be laid
on the development of the coal resources in Shanxi and Shaanxi provinces and
the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, the coal resources in southwest China
will be exploited in a rational way, and the coal resources in Xinjiang, Gansu,
Ningxia and Qinghai will be exploited in an appropriate way. Greater efforts
will be made to exploit coal bed methane. China boasts fairly rich oil
resources, which, however, are insufficient to meet the demand. To solve the
problem of insufficient oil and gas supply, China will first exploit and
utilize its domestic oil and natural gas resources. Abundant petroleum
resources have been discovered in the western regions. The Tarim and Junggar
basins in Xinjiang, the Ordos Basin on the borders of Shaanxi, Gansu, Ningxia,
Inner Mongolia and Shanxi, and the Qadam Basin in Qinghai all show great
potentials for development. Important discoveries have also been made in the
Bohai Sea area. In exploration and exploitation of oil resources, emphasis will
be placed on prospecting work in the old oilfields on the basis of exploiting
the deeper formations in the eastern regions, developing the oilfields in the
western regions and accelerating the exploration of offshore oil and gas
resources; at the same time, efforts will be exerted to make new discoveries in
the new formations and regions to increase the verified oil reserves and
maintain a rational rate of self-sufficiency in oil. In exploration and
exploitation of natural gas resources, emphasis will be placed on the Tarim,
Ordos and Qadam basins, and the Sichuan-Chongqing region along the west-east
gas pipeline, as well as the East China Sea Basin, to increase the reserves,
raise the output and gradually improve China’s energy structure.
—
Strive for a rational distribution of regional geological exploration and
exploitation of mineral resources. The comparative advantages of the mineral
resources in the western regions are conspicuous, and their distribution is
concentrated, thus providing the resources foundation for the formation of
dominant pillar industries. Of the country’s 158 minerals with proved reserves,
138 are found in the western regions. The more than 30 minerals found in the
western regions, including coal, oil and gas, sylvite, chromite, rare earths,
phosphorus, nickel, vanadium, manganese, copper, aluminum and zinc, have
comparative resources advantages in the country. With the implementation of the
western development strategy, the accelerated construction of infrastructure
facilities and ecological protection will help to connect quickly the resources
and the resource-related products of the western regions with the domestic and
international markets, thereby greatly improving the conditions for the
exploitation of mineral resources and the entry of mineral commodities into the
market. The Chinese government encourages the commercial exploration of mineral
resources, including oil, natural gas, coal gas, high-grade coal, copper, gold,
high-grade manganese, sylvite and groundwater in the western regions, with
emphasis on the resource-rich areas, to promote the rational exploitation and
deep processing of oil, natural gas, non-ferrous metals, sylvite, phosphorus
and other mineral resources in the western regions and accelerate the change
from resources advantage to economic advantage. In the central and eastern
regions, emphasis will be placed on tapping the potentials of the mineral
resources, strengthening their multipurpose use and expanding their processing
industrial chain. Exploration of tungsten, tin, antimony, lead, zinc and rare
earth resources will be started in accordance with the targets of the
adjustment of the national industrial structure. Full play will be given to the
advantages of the central and eastern regions in regional position and technologies
in the exploitation of non-metallic minerals, so as to raise the level of deep
processing and the degree of intensive utilization of non-metallic minerals,
open new fields for their application and increase the market competitiveness
of the products. At the same time, we will start the work of looking for
substitute resources in existing mines in the central and eastern regions.
Maritime areas under Chinese jurisdiction abound in mineral resources. The
Chinese government will continue to strengthen the prospecting and exploitation
of oil and gas resources in these areas and conduct research into other mineral
resources, and take an active part in the international activities of seabed
mineral resources research, prospecting and exploitation.
—
Accelerate the structural adjustment of mineral resources exploitation and
utilization. The degree of intensiveness and modernization of mineral resources
exploitation in China is still somewhat low, and it is necessary to optimize
the structure, innovate technologies and improve management in this regard.
China will speed up the structural adjustment of mineral resources exploitation
and utilization, increase productive capacity and raise efficiency. Through
technological transformation of mining enterprises and improvement of their
management mechanism, the Chinese government encourages the active introduction
of clean production, and the application of mature and high and new
technologies in mineral resources prospecting and exploitation, so as to raise
the level of prospecting and exploitation. We shall introduce scale
exploitation, raise the level of intensiveness and eliminate backward and
scattered mining capacity. Mining enterprises which operate without licenses,
cause environmental pollution, waste resources or do not have the proper
conditions for safe operation shall be closed down in accordance with the law.
Through market and policy guidance, we shall develop mining enterprise groups
with international competitiveness. We shall continue to support and assist
non-state-owned mining enterprises in their development.
—
Raise the level of multipurpose utilization of mineral resources. Of China’s
proved mineral resources, there are fairly large quantities of low-grade
resources which are still difficult of utilization under the present
technological and economic conditions. The exploitation and utilization of
these resources is an important way to solve the shortage of mineral resources
supply. The Chinese government encourages the accelerated conversion of
resources with poor economic workability into resources of economic workability
by strengthening the construction of the necessary infrastructure facilities in
the resource-rich regions, improving the external conditions for the
construction of mines, using high and new technologies, and reducing the cost
of exploitation. To achieve multipurpose utilization of the country’s resources
is one of China’s important technological and economic policies on mineral
resources prospecting and exploitation. China carries out comprehensive
prospecting, overall evaluation, comprehensive exploitation and multipurpose
utilization of mineral resources. It encourages and supports mining enterprises
to exploit and utilize low-grade refractory resources, and encourages and
supports them to develop and use substitute or secondary resources to increase
the sources of resources supply and reduce production costs. It encourages
mining enterprises to pool efforts to tackle difficult sci-tech problems and
pursue technological transformation for the multipurpose utilization of the
“three wastes” (waste slag, waste gas and waste liquid). It also encourages the
recycling of scrap metals and secondary resources, as well as the active
exploitation of non-traditional mineral resources. China issued the “Interim
Provisions Concerning Certain Questions on the Multipurpose Utilization of
Resources” in 1985, promulgated the “Opinions on Making Further Multipurpose
Utilization of Resources,” and published the “Catalogue of Resources for Multipurpose
Utilization” in 1996. It has adopted preferential policies for the multipurpose
utilization of mineral resources in the fields of enterprise income tax and
value-added tax, and it encourages mining enterprises to raise the level of the
multipurpose resources utilization by reliance on scientific and technological
progress and innovations.
—
Save energy and reduce consumption. China encourages the development of
technologies for deep-processing of mineral products, new energy sources and
new material technologies as well as technologies and technical processes that
save energy, materials and water, reduce consumption and raise the efficiency
of resources utilization. We shall develop renewable sources of energy and
nuclear power, increase the use of clean coal and CBM, and reduce the
proportion of coal directly burned. We shall develop new metals, new non-metals
and substitutes for conventional mineral materials and reduce the dependence of
an economic society on conventional mineral materials.
—
Establish a system for the reserves of strategic mineral resources. China will
put the major strategic resources in the reserves order by stages and in
groups, on the basis of the present situation concerning the supply and demand
of mineral resources, as well as its national strength.
—
Solve step by step the problem of substitute resources in old mines. Some of
the large and medium-sized state-owned mines in China have entered their middle
or late stages, and have insufficient substitute resources. Some old mining
enterprises can no longer continue their operations because their resources are
exhausted. The Chinese government will increase its policy support for them by
formulating rational financial and tax policies in line with the
characteristics of mineral resources prospecting and exploitation, to create
good external conditions for their survival and development. We shall encourage
large old mines to look for substitute resources so as to prolong their service
life.
IV. Widening the Opening of, and Cooperation in,
Mineral Resources Exploration and Exploitation
China will carry out its policy of opening to the outside world unswervingly.
It will take an active part in international cooperation in the field of
mineral resources to promote the exchange of domestic and foreign resources,
capital, information, technology and markets on the basis of reciprocity and
mutual benefit.
China
implements the policy of encouraging foreign businesses to invest in mineral
resources prospecting and exploitation in the country. China encourages
domestic mining enterprises to cooperate with international mining companies,
draw on advanced international experience, import advanced technology and
operate in accordance with international practices. China began to open its oil
industry to the outside world in 1982 by using foreign capital and technology
to prospect and exploit oil and gas resources. As a result, the range of
exploitation has been extended, and the output of crude oil has risen by big
margins. Now, China has begun to participate in the exploitation of petroleum
resources outside the country. The Chinese government has already taken or will
take a number of new measures to further improve the environment for foreign
investment, widen the opening-up and strengthen international cooperation.
—
Giving further encouragement to foreign businesses to invest in China. China
issued the “Opinions on Further Encouraging Foreign Investment at Present” in
August 1999, the revised “Directory of Industries for Foreign Investment” in
March 2002, and the “Catalogue of Dominant Industries for Foreign Investment in
the Central and Western Regions” in June 2000. It clearly emphasizes that
greater financial support will be extended to enterprises with foreign
investment; encourages those enterprises to make technical innovations and
increase domestic purchases; encourages foreign investors to invest in the
central and western regions; and further improves the management and services
for enterprises with foreign investment.
—
Further improving cooperation with foreign companies in prospecting and
exploiting oil and gas resources. In the field of oil and gas resources, the
Chinese government has always adopted the pattern of cooperation with foreign
companies through one “window” based on product-sharing contracts, and this has
been widely endorsed by foreign oil companies. China issued the revised
“Regulations on the Exploitation of Offshore Oil Resources in Cooperation with
Foreign Enterprises” and the “Regulations on the Exploitation of Onshore Oil
Resources in Cooperation with Foreign Enterprises” in September 2001.
—
Encouraging foreign businesses to make investment in exploration and
exploitation of other mineral resources. China issued the “Opinions on Further
Encouraging Foreign Businesses to Make Investment in Exploring and Exploiting
Mineral Resources Other Than Oil and Gas” in October 2000, thus further opening
the prospecting and mining rights market to allow foreign businesses to start
prospecting ventures with exclusive capital or in cooperation with Chinese
partners, and guarantees their legal priority rights in exploiting the mineral
resources of workable economic value in the zones explored. The prospecting and
mining rights obtained by foreign businesses with such investment can be
transferred according to law. Foreign businesses which invest in exploiting and
recovering paragenous (associated) minerals, utilizing tailings, raising the
rate of multipurpose utilization and exploration and exploitation of mineral
resources in the western regions shall be entitled to reduction of or exemption
from mineral resources compensation fees under a preferential policy. Foreign
businesses which make exclusive investment or set up joint ventures or
cooperate with Chinese enterprises in exploiting mineral resources, the
exploitation of which is encouraged in the “Directory of Industries for Foreign
Investment,” shall be exempted from mineral resources compensation fees for
five years. It is stipulated that governments at all levels shall not start
joint ventures or enter into cooperation with foreign investors in running
mines, and in no way should they make irrational economic demands on foreign
investors, make irrational inspections, requisition donations arbitrarily or
collect charges other than those stipulated in the laws and regulations.
—
Further improving the environment for investment in exploring and exploiting
domestic mineral resources. The Chinese government sticks to the protocol on
its accession to the WTO and other relevant commitments by annulling the
administrative statutes and departmental rules incompatible with the WTO rules
and gives national treatment to foreign investors in prospecting and
exploitation. The Central Government shall guarantee the consistent implementation
of the policies, laws and regulations of the state regarding mineral resources
exploration and exploitation in all parts of the country, and standardize the
behavior of governments at all levels in exercising management over foreign
investment in running mines. China has revised the rules for the management of
geological data according to the WTO’s principle of transparency, broadened the
scope of geological data to be released to the public, and established an open
information service system on mineral resources to ensure the availability of
public geological data for foreign investors. It has clarified, simplified and
standardized the approval procedure for foreign investment in mineral resources
prospecting and exploitation.
—
Changing the import mechanism and operation mode. In the course of taking the
new road to industrialization and attracting foreign investors to make
investment in mineral resources prospecting and exploitation, efforts will be
made to shift from laying emphasis on importing funds only to placing equal
emphasis on importing funds, technology, modern management and people with
expertise, from the mere emphasis on bringing in foreign funds in prospecting
and exploitation to the establishment of joint ventures and cooperation in the
development of services and trade in the mining industry, and from dependence
chiefly on foreign loans and direct foreign investment to the direct use of the
international mining capital market.
China
will continue to strive for mutual supplement with other countries in mineral
commodities and promote the development of foreign trade in mineral products by
expanding its international trade in mineral commodities according to the
principle of reciprocity and mutual benefit. The Chinese government shall
formulate a unified policy on the import and export of mineral products in
accordance with the WTO rules and its commitments on its accession to the WTO,
coordinate, in a unified way, the export of its dominant mineral products and
the import of mineral products in short supply, adjust the import and export
mix of mineral products, improve the economic results, and encourage the export
of deep-processed mineral products with high added value and the import of
primary mineral products. Direct import of mineral products will remain the
chief way by which China utilizes foreign mineral resources for a fairly long
time to come. The Chinese government shall gradually change the situation in
which the proportion of the spot trade in mineral commodities, including crude
oil, is too big at present, encourage the signing of long-term supply contracts
with foreign companies, and import minerals from diversified sources. With
regard to mineral resources in which China has advantages, such as tungsten,
tin, antimony, rare earths, fluorspar and barite, the government will improve
the export structure, increase the added value of the export products,
standardize the order of export business, and actively urge the trade
intermediary organizations to improve trade coordination and self-discipline,
and promote the healthy development of the trade in domestic and foreign
mineral products.
The
Chinese government encourages domestic enterprises to take part in
international cooperation in the sphere of mineral resources, and in exploration,
exploitation and utilization of foreign mineral resources. It will promote and
protect investments in mineral resources prospecting and exploitation outside
China, and standardize the investment and business operation behavior in
accordance with international practices. It will actively develop cooperation
with foreign companies in geological survey and mineral resources prospecting
and exploitation, and promote bilateral and multilateral exchanges and
cooperation in the relevant scientific and technological fields.
V. Achieving the Coordinated Development of Mineral
Resources Exploitation and Environmental Protection
Mineral resources prospecting and exploitation will change and affect the
ecological environment around the mining areas. The Chinese government attaches
great importance to environmental protection and the prevention and control of
pollution in the course of exploiting and utilizing mineral resources, and
strives for simultaneous development in mineral resources exploitation and
environmental protection and pollution control. Environmental protection,
pollution control and land rehabilitation in mining areas are explicitly
stipulated in laws and regulations China has published and implemented. The
Chinese government will continue to improve environmental protection in mining
areas, and strengthen the work in the following aspects:
—
Continuing to adhere to the principle of placing equal stress on the
exploitation and utilization of mineral resources and the protection of the ecological
environment, by putting prevention first and combining prevention with control.
We shall strictly adhere to the system of environmental impact evaluation
reporting, the system of land rehabilitation and the system of collecting fees
for pollutant discharge in mining areas. We shall strictly adhere to the system
whereby the construction of mines goes hand in hand with the designing,
constructing and commissioning of environmental protection facilities. Active
guidance will be given to enterprises in organizing clean and safe production
in the course of mineral resources prospecting and exploitation.
—
Restricting the exploitation of mineral resources that produce considerable
negative impacts on the ecological environment. Strict control will be enforced
on prospecting and exploitation in national conservation and other areas where
the ecological conditions are weak. Mineral resources exploitation is forbidden
in national conservation, important scenic areas and important geological
protection areas, and mineral resources exploitation in ecological protection
areas is strictly restricted. We shall strictly prohibit coking, metal refining
and smelting, sulfur and vanadium refineries with indigenous methods. We shall
restrict the building or rebuilding of mines producing coal with a sulfur
content exceeding 1.5%, and prohibit the building of mines producing coal with
a sulfur content exceeding 3%. We shall restrict the exploitation of mineral
resources in areas liable to geological disasters, and prohibit the
exploitation of mineral resources in areas with real danger from geological
disasters. Unauthorized exploitation of mineral resources within a given
distance on both sides of railway lines and major highways is forbidden.
—
Evaluating the impact on the ecological environment before starting a new
mineral resources exploitation project. Measures shall be taken to protect the
ecological environment, avoid or reduce adverse effects or damage caused to the
air, water, farmland, grasslands, forests and seas. A program for the
exploitation and utilization of mineral resources shall include a plan for the
protection of water and soil, a plan for land rehabilitation, a plan for the
prevention and control of geological disasters in mining areas and an evaluation
report on geological environmental impacts. These documents shall be submitted
for approval as stipulated. We shall exercise stricter supervision and
management over the control of the “three wastes” in mines, and strictly
control the discharge of waste gas in accordance with the criteria stipulated
by the state. We shall strengthen the control of poisonous and harmful waste
water and other pollutants produced in mines, and offenders shall be severely
dealt with.
—
Strengthening the investigation and monitoring of the environment and the
prevention and control of disasters in mining areas. The government shall
organize nationwide investigations and evaluations of the ecological
environment in mining areas. Mining enterprises shall strengthen investigation,
monitoring, forecasting and early warning of disasters possibly induced in the
course of the development of mines, promptly take effective measures to prevent
and control them, and submit monitoring reports to the competent departments of
the local governments. An information network shall be established and
emergency anti-disaster plans shall be worked out to prevent sudden disasters
at the maximum.
—
Setting up a multi-source investment mechanism for environmental protection in
mining areas. We shall establish an agreement-honoring system for environmental
protection and land rehabilitation in mining areas, and adopt government
guidance and market operation to ensure the effective restoration and
improvement of the environment there. With regard to abandoned mines and old
mines, the state will strengthen the restoration and improvement of the
ecological environment on the basis of demonstration projects, and encourage
investment in this regard from society at large. We shall set up an investment
mechanism for environmental control in mines still in production, with the
mining enterprises playing the leading role. The enterprises shall provide the
funds for environmental protection in new mines.
VI. Improving the Management of Mineral Resources
In the past five decades and more since the founding of the People’s Republic,
China has gradually improved the management of its mineral resources, putting
it on legal, standardized and scientific tracks.
—
Enacting and gradually improving the laws and regulations on mineral resources
management. China has put in place a legal system for its mineral resources,
consisting of the “Mineral Resources Law” and other relevant laws and
regulations, with the Constitution as its foundation. Since 1982, China has
successively promulgated the “Mineral Resources Law,” “Land Administration
Law,” “Coal Law,” “Law on Safety in Mines,” “Environmental Protection Law,”
“Marine Environmental Protection Law” and “Law on the Use and Management of Sea
Areas.” The Chinese government has also issued more than 20 supplementary
statutes and regulations, including the “Detailed Rules for the Implementation
of the Mineral Resources Law,” “Regulations on the Exploitation of Offshore Oil
Resources in Cooperation with Foreign Enterprises,” “Regulations on the
Exploitation of Onshore Oil Resources in Cooperation with Foreign Enterprises,”
“Measures Governing the Registration and Management of Areas for Surveying
Mineral Resources,” “Measures Governing the Registration and Management of
Mineral Resources Exploitation,” “Measures Governing Administration of the
Transfer of Prospecting and Mining Rights,” “Provisions on the Administration
of the Collection of Mineral Resources Compensation Fees,” “Interim Measures on
the Supervision and Control of Mineral Resources,” and “Regulations on the
Management of Geological Data.” The various provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities directly under the Central Government have, in addition,
formulated relevant local statutes. These laws and regulations have put in
place China’s basic legal system for the management of its mineral resources,
and provided the legal guarantee for exercising administration, managing
mineral resources and operating mines according to law.
—
Deepening the reform of the mineral resources management system. To constantly
meet the requirements for economic restructuring, China has reformed the
mineral resources management system, changed and strengthened government
functions, and separated government functions from enterprise and institution
management. From 1950 to 1981, the former Ministry of Geology and other
relevant industrial administration departments exercised management over the
country’s mineral resources. The geological departments chiefly performed the
functions of organizing nationwide geological survey and prospecting, managing
the reserves of mineral resources and controlling the collection and exchange
of geological data, while the relevant industrial administration departments
were responsible for the management of mineral resources exploitation. In 1982,
the Ministry of Geology changed its name to the Ministry of Geology and Mineral
Resources, and became responsible for the supervision and management of mineral
resources exploitation as well as the industrial management of geological
survey and prospecting. When the government was reorganized in 1988 and 1993,
it made further clear the four basic functions of the Ministry of Geology and
Mineral Resources — exercising comprehensive management of mineral resources,
exercising industrial management of geological survey and prospecting,
exercising supervision and management of the rational exploitation, utilization
and protection of mineral resources, and exercising management of the
monitoring, evaluation and supervision work regarding the geological
environment. The National Mineral Resources Commission was established in
January 1996 to strengthen the centralized management function of the Central
Government over mineral resources and safeguard the rights and interests of the
state as the owner of the country’s mineral resources. The government was
restructured again in 1998, and the functions of mineral resources management
belonging to the State Planning Commission and the coal and metallurgical
industrial departments were transferred to the Ministry of Land and Resources,
to achieve the centralized management of mineral resources of the whole
country. At present, over 90% of the country’s prefectures and cities, and more
than 80% of the counties have set up land and mineral resources administration
organs.
—
Strengthening the management of mineral resources planning. The plan regarding
mineral resources is the guiding document for the survey, exploitation and
utilization of the country’s mineral resources and the basis for exercising
macro control. The Chinese government is further strengthening mineral
resources planning, improving the planning system, fixing strict planning
responsibility, check-up, announcement, revision and compilation and
supervision systems, strengthening publicity work concerning the plans, and
setting up a system for ensuring the implementation of the plans and
information feedbacks, to guarantee the fulfillment of the planned targets.
—
Reforming the management system for mineral resources prospecting and mining
rights. The Constitution and the “Mineral Resources Law” of China explicitly
state that “mineral resources are owned by the state.” The State Council
exercises the state ownership of the mineral resources. At the same time, China
has reformed the management system for mineral resources prospecting and mining
rights, clearly defined the property right attribute of the prospecting and
mining rights, and established the system of acquisition of the prospecting and
mining rights with compensation and the transfer of them according to law.
China has established a legal system whereby the holder of the prospecting
right enjoys priority in acquiring the mining right in the area explored, and
strengthened the exclusiveness of the prospecting and mining rights. It has
changed the limits of authority regarding giving approval to mineral resources
prospecting and exploitation and issuing the prospecting and mining licenses.
The prospecting and mining rights can be obtained with compensation by such means
as competition through bidding, auction and listing. The transfer of
prospecting or mining rights shall follow the market rules, be subject to
approval from government departments, and go through the procedure for transfer
according to law. The Chinese government will continue to cultivate and
standardize the prospecting and mining rights market, and exercise stricter
supervision and control over the operation of the market in accordance with the
requirements of clearly defined ownership, complete rules, effective regulation
and control, and standard operation.
—
Improving the system of compensation for the use of mineral resources. China’s
“Mineral Resources Law” clearly provides for the system of compensation for the
use of mineral resources. The Chinese government started levying compensation
fees for mineral resources from the holders of mining rights in 1994, thus
terminating the history of compensation-free mining in China. The collection of
the compensation fees for mineral resources (fees for the use of mining areas
in cooperative development of petroleum resources offshore or onshore) embodies
the rights and interests of the state as the owner of the mineral resources,
and is conducive to establishing an economic incentive mechanism to promote the
protection and rational utilization of mineral resources. The compensation fees
for mineral resources collected by the Chinese government are included in the
state budget; they are specially managed and used chiefly in mineral resources
prospecting. Holders of mining rights who conform to the stipulations of the
laws and statutes shall have their compensation fees remitted or reduced. The
Chinese government has stipulated that, beginning in 1998, it will collect fees
for the use of prospecting and mining rights, and the costs for the prospecting
and mining rights formed in the course of prospecting with state investment
from the holders of the prospecting and mining rights. Fees and costs for the
use of prospecting and mining rights shall be remitted or reduced for mineral
resources exploration and exploitation, which meet the requirements, in the
western regions, regions inhabited by ethnic minorities, remote and poor
regions designated by the government, and offshore areas.
—
Rectifying and standardizing the order of mineral resources management. Good
order in the mineral resources management is a prerequisite for the protection
and rational utilization of mineral resources. Since the “Mineral Resources
Law” was promulgated in 1986, Chinese legislative organs have organized
examinations on law enforcement on many occasions. Since 1995, the Chinese
government has rectified the order of mineral resources management on a large
scale throughout the country, resulting in some improvement in the order of
mineral resources management. The Chinese government will continue to intensify
supervision over the enforcement of the law, rectify and standardize the order
of mineral resources management, strengthen supervision over production safety,
safeguard the rights and interests of the state as the owner of mineral
resources and the legitimate rights and interests of the holders of prospecting
and mining rights.
—
Improving the services of the government departments. It is necessary to
improve the style of service and make the appropriate administrative affairs
known in accordance with the requirements of being open, transparent,
standardized and highly efficient. Mineral resources administrative departments
at all levels shall announce to the general public on their work system,
matters for approval, important documents, standards and time limits, and
subject themselves to public supervision. They shall establish systems for
internal joint hearings, handling procedures or documents at windows, and
ascertaining administrative responsibilities. They shall establish a communiqué
system, release information on the mineral reserves and the progress in mineral
resources exploration and exploitation, and gradually make the geological data
and information known to the general public. They shall establish a system for
access to information so that the general public can promptly inquire about the
state plan, policies, laws and statutes concerning mineral resources, and
criteria for the classification of the reserves of the resources, seek
information on the registration of prospected areas, on registration of
exploitation, and rates of compensation fees for mineral resources and ways of
payment. At the same time, they shall make great efforts to apply information
technology, raise their work efficiency and improve their services.
China
is a developing country with a large population and a relative shortage of
resources. China will continue to deepen the reform, widen the opening-up,
develop the socialist market economy unswervingly, take the road of sustainable
development, and rationally use and protect its resources. China will, as
usual, take an active part in international cooperation for the development of
resources and environment protection, and join hands with all other countries
in the world in advancing boldly to achieve the sustainable development of
human society.