Oil-hungry China set to promote bio-energy fuel production


Posted: Wednesday, May 03, 2006 at 0035 hrs IST
Updated: Wednesday, May 03, 2006 at 0035 hrs IST


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Beijing, May 2 : Energy-hungry China has started working on fiscal policies, including subsidies, to encourage production of biological energy as substitute for oil which would help the country reduce its reliance on oil and build an environmentally friendly society.

The ministry of finance is working on policies that will enable the government as well as energy consumers to share the cost and risks of bio-energy production in case oil prices are too low for bio-energy business to be profitable, vice-minister of finance, Zhu Zhigang said.

Zhu said that the ministry is considering a plan to provide subsidies to a few selected companies specialising in bio-energy production as demonstration projects before the cost and risk sharing mechanism is created. but he declined to say how much money the Chinese government will spend in the coming years on bio-energy project, Xinhua news agency reported.

Bio-energy mainly refers ethanol made from grain and stems of plants and methane, which are environmentally friendly and renewable. China has increased its annual production capacity of fuel ethanol to 1.02 million tonnes thanks to direct funding from the ministry, preferential tax policies and subsidies, he said. The fuel ethanol has been produced in northeast China, central China’s Henan province, north China’s Hebei province and east China’s Anhui, Shandong and Jiangsu provinces. The raw material for the fuel ethanol includes corn and wheat, and the ethanol has been purchased and mixed with gasoline by the country’s state-owned oil producers, including Sinopec. Zhu said the ministry has allocated $250 million for those ethanol projects in the past five years, which were launched mainly to solve the problem of corn surplus in northeast China, the country’s major corn-producing area. The corn-for-ethanol projects increase market demand for corn and the market prices of corn have been increasing gradually in the past several years, the vice-minister said.

An academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shi Yuanchun said China should do more to increase production of bio-energy to catch up with the United States, the European Union, Brazil and India.

China should study ways to manufacture ethanol using stalks and plants produced from wasteland and low-quality land not suitable for grain production, said Shi, former president of China Agriculture University.

The plants include sugar grass, which is suitable for salina and other low-quality land in 18 provincial areas north of China’s yellow river and Huaihe river basins. Those land totals 33.34 million hectares, and one...

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