China passes law allowing regions to set resource taxes
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[August 26, 2019]
SHANGHAI/
SINGAPORE (Reuters)
- Chinese legislators approved a new law on Monday that will give local
governments authority to tax as many as 164 different resources,
including fossil fuels, minerals and eventually water, the Ministry of
Finance said on Monday.
The National People's Congress, China's parliament, approved the new
resource tax law on Monday and it will go into effect in September next
year, the ministry said in a briefing.
Officials insisted it will not raise the overall tax burden on local
firms.
Major resources such as crude oil or rare earths will still be subject
to a fixed tax rate set by the central government, but local authorities
will be able to adjust the rates levied on other products, said Xu
Guoqiao, a senior inspector with the taxation department at the Ministry
of Finance.
The law will enable governments to provide tax relief for depleted,
low-grade mines or regions hit by natural disasters. It also allows tax
exemptions to be applied to serve policy strategies like the development
of coalbed methane, he said.
It will also lay the groundwork for a nationwide water resource tax
designed to encourage efficiency and conservation. China began levying a
pilot water resource tax in heavily polluted Hebei province in 2016.
Local authorities will be granted powers to levy higher rates of tax in
regions where water resources are relatively scarce, but Xu said it will
not raise the overall taxes paid.
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A worker speaks as he loads coal on a truck at a depot near a coal
mine from the state-owned Longmay Group on the outskirts of Jixi, in
Heilongjiang province, China, October 24, 2015. REUTERS/Jason
Lee/File Photo
"It will mainly strengthen the water conservation awareness of taxpayers,
prevent the overexploitation of groundwater and force high water-consuming
enterprises to save water and improve efficiency," he said.
China's resource tax reforms were first introduced for products like crude oil,
natural gas and coal in 2011 and extended to other commodities in 2016.
Chinese firms were previously charged on the basis of how much of a resource
they used, but the new tax system is based on prices rather than volume.
Under the new law, Chinese and foreign firms jointly exploring for oil and gas
in onshore and offshore oil and gas blocks will be continue to pay only
royalties for contracts that were signed before Nov. 1, 2011, the official China
News Service reported on Monday.
But they will have to start paying the resource tax once the contract expires,
the report said.
(Reporting by David Stanway in SHANGHAI and Chen Aizhu in SINGAPORE; editing by
Christian Schmollinger)
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