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A deadly explosion at a plant in Yancheng prompted the latest crackdown. Photo: AP

China’s chemical crackdown ‘having more impact on business than US trade war’

  • Industry official says that campaign targeting illegal plants is forcing international suppliers to look elsewhere
  • Authorities began series of inspection campaigns following deadly blast in eastern province of Jiangsu in March

A crackdown on the chemical sector by the Chinese government is having a bigger impact on businesses than the US-China trade war, according to an industry association official, with supply chains disrupted by tough inspections and plant closures.

China has launched a series of inspection campaigns aimed at tackling illegal or irregular chemical production after a lethal explosion at an industrial park in Jiangsu province killed 78 people and injured dozens more in March.

The blast in the coastal city of Yancheng also drew attention to the role played by thousands of poorly regulated Chinese chemical manufacturers in the global supply chain, with the stricken Tianjiayi factory said to be providing components to several multinational conglomerates.

But the inspections have already disrupted the flow of key chemical ingredients, and forced international suppliers to look elsewhere or even consider moving their businesses abroad, said Fu Xiangsheng, the vice-chairman of the China Petroleum and Chemical Industry Association.

The explosion in March killed 78 people. Photo: Reuters

“Blanket cuts at petrochemical industrial parks have much bigger impacts than the Sino-US trade war,” Fu told an industry conference on Wednesday, without elaborating.

He also said that some local authorities had made the closure of chemical plants one of the key performance indicators for government officials, which was another major concern for investors.

China’s chemical sector crackdown is ongoing, with Jiangsu province itself promising to shut down dozens of industrial parks and small-scale chemical manufacturers and improve the way surviving plants are regulated.

Shao Ji, a director of the petrochemical department of the National Development and Reform Commission told the conference that Beijing was working to clean up, rectify and relocate chemical parks throughout the entire country, but he did not provide any further details.

Officials are targeting illegal or poorly regulated plants following the explosion in Jiangsu province. Photo: Xinhua

China is planning to relocate more than 80 per cent of its hazardous chemical production capacity by the end of next year, with much of it being shifted to specialised industrial parks.

The financial magazine Caixin said some factories were being forced to move for a second time as a result of increasingly stringent zoning restrictions.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Chemical crackdown ‘hurts more than trade war’
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