DALIAN, June 28 (Xinhua) -- An export processing zone
(EPZ) designed to accommodate the 2.5-billion-U.S.-dollar chip plant proposed by
U.S. computer chip giant Intel Corp. in northeast China's port city Dalian
officially went into operation Thursday, after passing authentication by the
Chinese government.
The move shall pay the way for the formal beginning
of the construction of the chip plant, which has been schemed for August,
company and government sources here said.
The EPZ, covering 600,000 square meters, passed
inspection by a panel of experts from 10 ministries and departments of the
central government, including the General Administration of Customs, the State
Development and Reform Commission, and the Ministry of Land and Resources.
An EPZ is an industrial development area specifically
designed to facilitate the manufacture of export products and services. Tariffs
and quotas are eliminated and bureaucratic requirements are lowered in order to
attract companies.
"Intel can enjoy preferential taxation policies and
lower its costs in importing raw materials and exporting products, as its new
plant will be built in the EPZ," said Zhang Zhinan, head of Dalian Customs.
Intel announced on March 26 in Beijing that it would
build a 2.5-billion-dollar semiconductor plant in Dalian, Liaoning Province,
making the company one of the largest foreign investors in China and raising its
total investment in the country to nearly four billion dollars.
"Intel had proposed establishing an EPZ for the plant
while negotiating with the government at the very beginning, and the government
agreed," said Tang Zhongde, an expert on semiconductor integrated circuits and
Chinese negotiator for Intel's Dalian project.
Chinese regulations stipulate that an EPZ should be
set up in a state-level development zone, its annual turnover of processing
trade should exceed 100 million dollars, and it should be abolished if there is
no investment within three years.
The EPZ project had been advancing on schedule with
the support of the Dalian municipal government, which indicated the Chinese
government had honored its commitment, said Zhang Yifan, a spokeswoman for Intel
(China).
Intel's new chip project will be located in a
high-tech zone north of Dalian city proper with an area of more than 160,000
square meters.
The company's first factory in Asia, it will become
part of Intel's network of eight factories worldwide that produce 300-millimetre
integrated wafers after it starts operations in the first half of
2010.