BEIJING, Dec. 4 (Xinhua) -- China's long-awaited fuel tax
reform may start as early as January, along with the country's
government-controlled oil pricing reforms, a senior official said Thursday.
"I personally think Jan. 1 is a good time to
introduce the fuel tax," Zhang Xiaoqiang, vice minister of the National
Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), said during participating in the fifth
China-U.S. Strategic Economic Dialogue (SED) held in Beijing.
The State Council, or the Cabinet, had discussed the
reform plans of oil pricing mechanism and fuel tax and fees last week, and had
decided to make public the draft reform plan to solicit public advice.
The country's moves to put a fuel tax in place came
as the world crude prices had plunged almost 70 percent from the peak price of
147 U.S. dollars in mid-July. Analysts have argued that said the on-going oil
price drop presented a good opportunity for China to resume its fuel tax reform.
Zhang said the Chinese government had reiterated its
stance to launch a deepened reform on the country's resources, including energy,
in the principle of reflecting "scarcity of resources, market supply and demand
and environmental costs".
"Prices of domestic oil products still present a big
gap in respect to this principle," he said, "so the government has decided to
speed up the reforms."