BIZCHINA / Weekly Roundup

Water safety
By LU HAOTING (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-03-20 08:05

Management guru Peter Drucker said in the early 1990s: "In 10-15 years, organizations may be outsourcing all work that is 'supportive' rather than revenue-producing."

The current trend of industrial wastewater treatment in China would bear him out.

A rising number of large-scale enterprises in China are outsourcing wastewater treatment to professional contractors to concentrate on their core businesses, and most importantly, to meet stringent government requirements on curbing industrial water pollution.


Wastewater discharge fees for families
Beijing 0.9 yuan (US$0.11) per ton
Shanghai 0.9 yuan (US$0.11) per ton
Guangzhou 0.7 yuan (US$0.09) per ton

Wastewater discharge fees for enterprises
Beijing 1.5 yuan (US$0.19) per ton
Shanghai 1.1-1.4 yuan (US$0.14-0.17) per ton
Guangzhou 0.7 yuan (US$0.09) per ton

"That is exactly what we are looking for. It means huge business opportunities for professional wastewater treatment companies like us," says Huang Xiaojun, vice-president of Veolia Water China.

The French water service company recently signed a partnership contract with a subsidiary of China Petroleum & Chemical Corp (Sinopec), China's largest oil refiner. Under the 25-year agreement, Veolia Water and Sinopec Beijing Yanshan Petrochemical Corp will set up a 50-50 joint venture to operate facilities to collect, treat and recycle industrial wastewater at Sinopec Yanshan, which is located 50 kilometres southwest of Beijing.

"The partnership represents a significant step in strengthening Veolia Water's business portfolio, in parallel with the municipal business that has grown strongly over the past three years," says Antoine Frerot, the company's chief executive officer.

Sinopec Yanshan is Veolia Water's second corporate customer since it entered China in 1997 it signed a 15-year outsourcing contract in 2003 to manage the entire water system at Michelin's tyre manufacturing plant in Shanghai. It currently has 16 municipal water deals.

"Over the years, we have been concentrating on municipal projects in China. Developing more corporate customers in the country will be the next business focus," Huang says.
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