แสดงบทความที่มีป้ายกำกับ Special Economic Zone. แสดงบทความทั้งหมด
แสดงบทความที่มีป้ายกำกับ Special Economic Zone. แสดงบทความทั้งหมด

วันศุกร์ที่ 13 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2556

Myanmar : Chinese and Indian Firms Tipped for Kyaukphyu SEZ Bidding Race.

Myanmar : Chinese and Indian Firms Tipped for Kyaukphyu SEZ Bidding Race.
The Burmese government call for international bids to develop a proposed Special Economic Zone around Kyaukphyu on the western coast makes no mention of existing MoUs already signed with Chinese and Japanese companies, and reportedly involving noted crony Burmese businessman Tay Za.
The announcement raises questions over these previous agreements, but an economic expert on Burma said he thinks China remains the frontrunner to develop the SEZ, and might face competition from Indian companies.
China certainly has a head start over anyone else at Kyaukphyu, a town located on the coast of western Burma’s Arakan State. It built and operates the oil port import terminal on Ramree Island where Kyaukphyu is located. Its twin crude oil and natural gas pipelines start there, and the Chinese have signed a MoU to build an 800-kilometer railway linking the SEZ with China’s Yunnan Province — the destination of the pipelines.
The railway MoU awarded China’s Railways Engineering Corporation a long-term Build-Operate-Transfer agreement “under which China will fund and construct the railway and operate it for half a century before handing it over to the Burma authorities,” according to Arakan Oil Watch, a Thailand-based human rights and resources transparency NGO.
Arakan Oil Watch says in a special study that the SEZ planned for Kyaukphyu is one of several being targeted by China’s central planners across Southeast Asia to improve trade with ASEAN, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, following a free trade agreement between the two.
Arakan Oil Watch claims that two or three large companies are already designated to be the main SEZ developers. It identifies these as CITIC, a state-owned Chinese conglomerate; Nippon Koei Company, a Japanese engineering consultancy; and Burma’s Htoo Trading Company, a subsidiary of the Htoo Group of Companies owned by noted former military junta crony businessman Tay Za.
These companies have previously signed MoUs with various Burmese government ministries to develop the Kyaukphyu SEZ.
It’s unclear whether the Naypyidaw government has abandoned SEZ development proposals for the Kyaukphyu area drawn up by Nippon Koei Company in association with China’s CITIC, or whether they would be incorporated in any new bidding proposals.
The government’s Bid Evaluation and Awarding Committee said bidding development strategy contracts for a Kyaukphyu SEZ must be lodged before November 19, and suggested that initial work could begin in April 2014.
Earlier outline proposals for a central coast SEZ cover an area of 120 square kilometres, embracing all of Ramree Island and rural districts on the adjoining mainland.
Sean Turnell, a prominent economist with a close understanding of Burma, thinks Indian state-owned businesses could be interested in investing in a Kyaukphyu SEZ, as India is “anxious to offset China’s erstwhile dominance in this strategically important area”.
But he told The Irrawaddy he thinks there will be little interest outside of Burma’s two giant neighbours, and warns that it would be a mistake to offer potential investors too many financial incentives otherwise there is a danger that “concession-dependent activities are the only ones attracted”.
“Likewise, it is important that links be established to local suppliers and other businesses, otherwise the danger that they simply become privileged ‘enclaves’ is likely,” said Turnell a professor at Macquarie University in Australia and co-author of the Burma Economic Watch Bulletin.
He added, “SEZs are not a bad idea in Burma, especially as locations for surmounting the country’s many institutional, infrastructure and energy obstacles, and as areas for policy experimentation.”
Arakan Oil Watch has warned, however, that plans revealed to date for a Kyaukphyu SEZ would likely mean the relocation of many thousands of people and a disruption to agricultural activity.
“The construction of the Special Economic Zone will multiply the already unfolding impacts of the Burma-China oil and gas pipelines. Massive industrialization will have devastating consequences for tens of thousands of farmers and fishermen who have been neither informed nor consulted about the plans,” the NGO said in its own assessment.
“According to project maps, the 120 square kilometres zone could lead to the relocation of about 40 villages as well as parts of Kyauk Phyu town. Construction of the Shwe pipelines and associated infrastructure has already led to the confiscation of thousands of acres of valuable farmlands. Most of these confiscations were involuntary.”
Until now, most SEZ activity in Burma has been centered on the plan for Thilawa on the edge of Rangoon, while a third potential major SEZ — at Dawei on the southeast coast — has been at a standstill for lack of investment. Japanese companies are dominating development plans for Thilawa.
However, the Thilawa SEZ, located some 20 kilometers from Burma’s commercial capital Rangoon, has been stalled for nearly one year due to land rights issues, power supply and other infrastructure problems. The project is supposed to be one third complete by 2015.
A recent assessment by the Oxford Business Group, a research company with offices in London and Dubai, thought Thilawa nonetheless offered the best early prospects for an SEZ to help develop Burma’s nascent market economy.

“The Thilawa SEZ’s location, close to [Rangoon] and committed funding by Japanese low-interest loans, makes it a more likely success story for the coming years. Mitsubishi, Marubeni and Sumitomo are all conducting feasibility studies to use the zone, alongside Japan International Cooperation Agency and the Japanese government,” said the Oxford Business Group study.

Resource from:
http://www.irrawaddy.org/archives/43874

วันพุธที่ 21 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2556

Myanmar : As Thilawa SEZ Launch Nears, Farmers Concerned About Compensation

Myanmar : As Thilawa SEZ Launch Nears, 
Farmers Concerned About Compensation

Residents who will be displaced by the Thilawa Special Economic Zone (SEZ) in Rangoon Division are complaining that although the project is due to begin next month, procedures to compensate them for lost land remain unclear.
Plans to resolve land issues have lacked transparency, Mya Hlaing, a spokesman for farmers in the project area in Thanlyin Township, told The Irrawaddy.
“Negotiations are continuing, but no arrangements have been made to relocate local residents,” he said. “Since the project is due to start next month, now is high time to announce an implementation plan for the project.”
Set Aung, Burma’s deputy minister of national planning and economic development, is chairman of the implementation group for the Japanese-backed Thilawa SEZ. He said negotiations were going relatively smoothly but had been complicated by businesspeople with separate interests who were backing the farmers.
“Those businesspeople behind the farmers never stop coming forward,” he told The Irrawaddy. “Currently, half the farmland from the project zone has been purchased by business giants, and they bought this land in complicated ways.”
“Our assessment methods regarding rates of compensation abide by international norms,” he added. “We are still conducting surveys and making calculations.”
In June, the deputy minister told The Irrawaddy that international World Bank and Japanese standards for compensation would be followed.
“We won’t offer payments to the farmers for the rest of their lives, but we will offer them a fair amount so they have savings in their current situation,” he said.
Farmers in the project area have decided to move only after receiving 30 million kyats (US$30,000) for each acre (0.40 hectares) of farmland. That amount of money is not much compared to the current price of farmland, says Aye Htay, speaking on behalf of the farmers.
He said the farmers were willing to negotiate with the government over compensation, but added that if negotiations were not conducted in a smooth manner, the project would likely be delayed.
Farmers are also concerned about where they will be relocated, he said.
“It seems that each person will get one plot that is 800 square feet [245 square meters] in the relocation process,” he said. “It is unsatisfactory unless each person receives a plot that is 2,400 square feet. Nobody will accept a meager compensation.”
Villages reportedly set to be relocated first include Phaya Gone, Alawn Soot, Phalan (Aye Mya Thida), Shwe Pyi Tha (Thilawa), Thaya Gone and Gayet Thida Myaing. Farmers in these villages will reportedly receive compensation first.
In 2012, Burma’s government began planning the Thilawa SEZ, together with Japan’s government, a consortium of Japanese firms and the Union of Myanmar Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry.
The sprawling industrial complex, located about 25 km south of Rangoon, includes a deep sea port, Japanese factories and large housing projects. The Burmese side owns 51 percent of the project and is responsible for developing a 2,400-hectare core zone.


The massive project is expected to drive Rangoon’s economic and urban growth in the next decades, and could generate up to 200,000 jobs when all four project phases are completed, a Burmese project developer said in May. But the project thus far has been marred by land disputes affecting hundreds of farmers.

Resource from:

วันอังคารที่ 25 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2556

Myanmar : China Wants Action on SEZ in Arakan as Locals Cast Wary Eye

China Wants Action on SEZ in Arakan 

as Locals Cast Wary Eye


In a visit to Naypyidaw on Monday, a senior Chinese diplomat said Beijing wanted to see “sooner implementation” of the Kyaukphyu Special Economic Zone (SEZ) in western Burma’s Arakan State, as some local residents cast a wary eye on the Asian giant’s economic ambitions.
Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi, the head of the Chinese delegation, said he hoped to see development of the Kyaukphyu project soon, and that “China wants to take part in the tasks of ensuring development of the southwestern part of Myanmar,” during a meeting with President Thein Sein, according to the state-run New Light of Myanmar newspaper.
Chinese projects in Arakan State include controversial natural gas and oil pipelines from Kyaukphyu to China’s Yunnan province. Construction of the dual pipelines, known as the Shwe gas project, is complete, and the piping of gas and oil northward is scheduled to begin soon. Oil storage tanks on Maday Island and natural gas storage tanks on Mala Island have also been installed.
Thein Sein on Monday said he “thanks China for the Kyaukphyu industrial zone project” and expressed hope that the “region could see development” as a result, but there were no details provided on the nature of the agreement nor what kind of support the Chinese would provide.
Local residents said there were no indications that development of the SEZ in Kyaukphyu had yet begun, nor had the local population been briefed about plans for the project.
In December, Deputy Labor Minister Myint Thein—the chairman of the SEZ Implementation Committee—paid a weeklong visit to Kyaukphyu and told residents at a meeting there that the project would be implemented in accordance with the desires of the local people.
“Kyaukphyu is a center of Chinese interest, so they will want to begin it sooner and quicker,” said Aye Zan, secretary of the Kyaukphyu SEZ Monitoring Committee, which was formed earlier this year after local residents called for collaboration on the project in terms of social and environmental impact assessments.
“But the authorities have not shared any plan with us,” he added.
The government has invited foreign firms to invest in the SEZ project, but there remains a lack of basic infrastructure, such as roads, electricity provision and port facilities, in the area.
“No development at the project area is seen, we only know that the ‘master plan’ for the project has been drawn up in collaboration with a Japanese company,” said Hla Myo Kyaw, a resident of Kyaukphyu and a member of the Kyaukphyu SEZ Monitoring Committee.
The residents said basic information about the SEZ—the project site, the size of the zone and whether local residents would need to be relocated—had not yet been provided to them.
A delegation of the Arakan State-based Rakhine Nationalities Development Party was among a group of Burmese political parties that visited China in April at the invitation of the External Communication Department of the Chinese Communist Party. It was not clear whether Beijing’s ambitions in Kyaukphyu were discussed.
Some locals are wary of Chinese-backed projects in Arakan State, with the Shwe gas project criticized by many for a lack of transparency and its negative environmental and social impacts, including forced displacements and harm to local fishermen’s livelihoods.
The monitoring committee said it would stand with local residents and air any concerns raised.
“If the villagers have to move for the project, it cannot happen,” Hla Myo Kyaw said, “as no one will accept relocation from their homes.”
In December 2012, the rights group Arakan Oil Watch reported that the Chinese state-owned conglomerate CITIC Group would manage the implementation of the Kyaukphyu SEZ on Ramree Island, where more than 200,000 people reside.
The report said the zone would require an initial investment of US$8.3 billion and a total of $89.2 billion over 35 years, using 120-square-km of land and 70-square-km of waterways, according to a feasibility study by CITIC Construction.
An 800-km long rail way connecting Kyaukphyu to Ruili in China’s Yunnan province will also reportedly soon be built, with its planned completion in 2015. The railway will pass through cities and villages in Arakan State, Magway and Mandalay divisions, and Shan State, as the Shwe gas and oil pipelines currently do.

Resource from:

วันอังคารที่ 28 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2556

China 's SEZ : Keys Success Factors in China ' s Economic Growth

China's SEZ : Keys Success Factors in China 's Economic Growth

China has many Special Economic Zones,which locate all of country.These SEZs are the key success factors to drive the Chinese Economic growth more than twenty years ago.China has many patthernes in this country,They call  Municipalities such as Beijing,Tianjin, Shanghai, Chongging or been in Provinces such as Heilongjiang, Jinlin, Liaoning, Hebei, Shandong, Snanxi, Henan, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Fujian, Anhiu, Guangdong, Hainan, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, Sichuan, Yunan, Shaanxi, Gansu, Qinghai, Taiwan or been in Autonomous area such as Ningxia Hui, Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang Uygur, Guangxi Zhuang, Tibet or been in Special Districts such as Hong Kong and Macao. And the special economic zones has be listed in the below tables

MunicipalitiesProvincesAutonomousSpecial Districts
Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, ChongqingHeilongjiang, Jinlin, Liaoning, Hebei, Shandong, Shanxi, Henan, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Fujian, Anhui, Guangdong, Hainan, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, Sichuan, Guizhou, Yunnan, Shaanxi, Gansu, Qinghai, TaiwanNingxia Hui, Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang Uygur, Guangxi Zhuang, TibetHong Kong
Macao

National Economic Development Zones
BeijingKunming, YunnanShihezi, Xinjiang
ChangChun, Kunshan, JiangsuSuzhou, Jiangsu
ChangSha, Hunan Lanzhou, GansuTaiyuan, Shanxi
ChengDu, SichuanLhasa, TibetTianjin
ChongqingLianyungang, JiangsuUrumqi, Xinjiang
Dalian, LiaoningNanchang, JiangxiWeihai, Shandong
DongshanNanjing, JiangsuWenzhou, Zhejiang
Fuqing RongqiaoNanning, GuangxiWuhan, Hubei
Fuzhou, FujianNantong, JiangsuWuhu, Anhui
GuangZhou, GuangdongNingbo Daxie, ZhejiangXi'an, Shaanxi
Guangzhou Nansha, GuangdongNingbo, ZhejiangXiamen Haicang, Fujian
Guiyang, GuizhouQingdao, ShandongXiaoshan, Zhejiang
Hainan YangpuQinghuangdao, HebeiXining, Qinghai
Hangzhou, ZhejiangShanghai MinghangYantai, Shandong
Harbin, HeilongjiangShanghai HongqiaoYinchuan, Ningxia
Hefei, AnhuiShanghai CaohejingYingkou,
Huhhot, Inner MongoliaShanghai JinqiaoZhanjiang
Huizhou DayawanShenyang, LiaoningZhengzhou