Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Green norms for overseas investment soon

Green norms for overseas investment soon
By Ding Qingfen (China Daily), 2010-07-09

BEIJING - The government will soon come out with environmental
protection guidelines for domestic companies planning overseas
investments, ministry officials said on Thursday.

According to experts, the guidelines will enhance the nation's "soft
power" in the global arena and foster more investment deals.

Domestic companies that have overseas operations will have to take
adequate steps to protect the environment and shoulder more corporate
social responsibility (CSR), they said.

The new rules will help improve the quality of overseas investments and
are called Chinese Overseas Direct Investment Environment Protection
Guidelines, said Yang Zhaofei, director-general of the Department of
Policies, Laws and Regulations under the Ministry of Environmental
Protection.

The commerce and environment protection ministries and the China Banking
Regulatory Commission are also involved in drafting the guidelines.

The rules will include other factors like the evaluation of
environmental impact, agreed protection mechanism, compensation and CSR,
said Yang without revealing a timeframe for the guidelines.

"Companies that violate the rules will have to pay for their actions,
and in some cases stop overseas investments," he said.

The government move comes at a time when Chinese companies have been
accused by the foreign media of going ahead with investment plans
without considering the impact on the local environment and communities.

"Objectively speaking, there do exist cases that have caused damage and
tarnished the reputation of Chinese overseas enterprises. Therefore,
there is an urgent need to standardize overseas investments and improve
quality," said Zhang Lijun, director of the Department of Asia Affairs
under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

"The overseas performance of domestic companies reflects the image and
influence of the Chinese government, and is also an important indicator
of the nation's soft power," Zhang said at a forum on environmental
policies in Beijing on Thursday.

Though a draft proposal was submitted to the Chinese government some
time back, negotiations among the concerned ministries are still ongoing.

"It is really difficult to make everyone happy about the guidelines, and
there are many uncertainties," said Ge Chazhong, a researcher at the
Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning under the Ministry of
Environmental Protection.

China must have rules to guide and standardize overseas investment, he
said.

The global economic crisis has not dampened the overseas investment
confidence of Chinese companies. Last year overseas direct investment in
non-financial sectors surged 6.5 percent year-on-year to $43.3 billion.
Prospects for this year are also bright, with the Ministry of Commerce
expecting overseas direct investment to touch $60 billion.

Most of the overseas direct investment has been in Asia, Africa and
Latin America, in manufacturing, wholesale, retail and commercial
sectors. Mining and resource-related sectors are also emerging as a new
investment focus for Chinese companies.

But along with the growth, there have also been complaints that some
investments are not green and socially responsible.

"Many foreign nations are prejudiced against China and its investments.
On the one hand, they want more Chinese investment, but at the same time
are probably not comfortable with the nation's growing prowess," said Zhang.
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