After a massive
retreat of foreign investment from China's power industry,
the resulting predicament of the country's power plants
within three to five years will trigger a re-surgence in
foreign investment dollars, said industry insiders.
The investment spree in power plant construction over the
past two years is forecast to create problems within the
country's power industry, when China's tight power supply
is greatly alleviated in a couple of years.
A number of
power plants will see declining profit margins or be shut
down by the government due to an inability to comply with
the country's environmental protection statutes.
Foreign investors consequently will have sizable opportunities
to merge with and acquire the local power plants confronted
by the operation difficulties at that time, Shi Weiming,
chief executive officer of Hong Kong-based Senergy International
(HK) Ltd told the Coaltrans China 2005 in Beijing earlier
this week.
The foreign
companies might acquire a stake in these plants at a lower
price, and enhance the power plants' management and technologies
to gain profits, he predicted.
The projected difficult position of China's power plants
in a couple of years comes from a number of factors, said
experts.
Soaring coal
prices, which account for half of the cost of the country's
power generation, have passed on great pressure to the power
plants, although the government is making sustained efforts
to ease the dispute between the coal suppliers and the power
companies.
Besides, as
the central government tightens control over power plant
construction in order to cool down over investment, under-construction
power plants- especially small and medium-sized ones -will
be facing great risks in meeting the government's operation
standard in a couple of years when they complete the construction.
"The power generators that run into trouble will have
to look for international partners to better the situation,"
said Shi.
The prediction,
however, is challenged by other industry analysts.
Tony Sun, vice-president
of Corporate Finance & Business Development at Singapore-based
Asia Power Corp Ltd said it will not be that easy for the
foreign investor to make a big foray into the country's
power industry within such a short period.
"Unlike
other sectors such as manufacturing, foreign investment
has been a marginalized presence in China's power generation
industry," Sun told China Daily in a telephone interview.
Due to an inability
to understand the rules of the game in China's power industry
and rising fuel costs in power generation, foreign investors
have failed to gain a strong footing in the domestic market,
said insiders.
The power
industry is more than an economic issue in China, with the
political implications of issues such as lower tariffs to
residents and electricity price stability of significant
concern.
"Rooted
in tradition, the country's power industry has been a government-controlled
sector, which gives little say to foreign investors,"
said Sun.
In addition,
most foreign players remain cautious in investing in China's
power industry because they are unassured by what they may
perceive as inconsistent policies coupled with a frail administrative
and legal system, analysts said.
Many investors
complain that the long-term power purchase agreements, which
set the generating hours and electricity tariffs to attract
foreign investment in the 1980s, had not been honoured.
Wei Bin, a
senior analyst with Beijing-based State Power Economic Research
Centre said some foreign investors will be likely to cash
in on the expected merger and acquisition opportunities
in a couple of years, but there will not be a large flow
of foreign investment.
Source:China
Daily