BEIJING, May 19 (Xinhua) -- Beijing Shougang steel
company, one of the capital's worst polluters, will close a key production plant
early next year in time for the Olympics, said a company source on Saturday.
Long-suffering Beijingers have been looking forward
to the closure and transfer of Shougang's activities for years.
A leading culprit in Beijing's shocking air
pollution, Shougang-- a historic industrial plant built in 1919 just 17
kilometers west of Tian'anmen Square -- started to relocate production in 2005
to Caofeidian, a site in Hebei.
No. 3 Steel Plant, which came on stream in 1992 and
has an annual production capacity of three million tons, will be the first group
plant to completely halt production, said Huo Guanglai, deputy secretary of
Shougang Communist Party of China Committee.
The steel company will move all its Beijing-based
production facilities to Caofeidian by 2010.
The company had already started to reduce production
in Beijing, closing a two-million-ton production facility and a furnace with a
capacity of 700,000 tons.
According to a plan approved by the State Council,
China's cabinet, it will maintain production capacity of four million tons
during the 2008 Beijing Olympics, but its operations will have to conform to
strict government guidelines, according to the company.
The Chinese government promised to make Beijing an
"ecological city" with "green hills, clear water, grass and blue skies" after it
won the 2008 Olympics bid.
Construction of the company's new steel plant began
in Caofeidian in March.
The new plant, a joint venture of Shougang and
Tangshan Steel and Iron Group, will adopt environment-friendly technologies to
minimize toxic emissions and waste discharge. It is destined to become the
country's largest steel production base.