Enterprises with poor environmental records risk
having bank loan applications rejected under a nationwide credit
system that factors environmental information when considering loan
requests.
The People's Bank of China (PBC), the central bank, is
working with the State Environmental Protection Administration
(SEPA) to promote the initiative, according to Su Ning, the bank's
deputy governor.
"This (move) will encourage enterprises to think more
about the effect their operations have on the environment," Su said
at a press conference yesterday in Beijing.
The initiative combines legal, economic and
administrative means into a powerful weapon against pollution, he
said, noting the move would compliment central government
environmental efforts.
This coordination between the two heavyweights is
further expected to reduce the risks borne by commercial
banks.
As China strives to strike a balance between economic
growth and environmental protection, industrial projects
contravening national environmental policies will be halted, which
although a worthy plan could create potential risks for the
commercial banks funding the projects, said Dai Genyou, director of
the central bank's Credit Management Bureau.
"If banks lend money to enterprises that are later
ordered to close down for violating environmental rules, banks will
suffer losses," Dai said.
Once the new credit system is installed, commercial
banks will first check the environmental records of borrowing firms
before allowing any money lending, he added.
Zhang Lijun, deputy director of the SEPA, said
information collected on environment-related law enforcement since
2003 would be placed into the central bank's credit
database.
The environmental records of enterprises are only a
part of the non-financial data to be included in the central bank's
credit system to help strengthen commercial banks' lending
security.
The central bank is also cooperating with a network of
departments, covering social security, customs, construction,
commodity quality supervision, taxation and legal affairs to bring
stability to the country's corporate finance system.
By the end of last year, the corporate credit database
had grown to 11.17 million credit records, 44 percent of which
represented enterprises that had borrowed money from commercial
banks.
(China Daily January 10,
2007)
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