Title of article
An imbalanced development of coal and electricity industries in China
Author/Authors
Bing Wang، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
10
From page
4959
To page
4968
Abstract
Chinaʹs coal and electricity industries have a strong reliance on each other, however, because of excessive invasion of government, it is difficult for these two industries to form a stable, reasonable, and transaction cost-saving relationships, but long-run disputes and quarrels. This paper discusses the pricing policies and transaction relationship between these two industries from the historical perspective. It begins with the discussion of coal. Coal market has become competitive since 1980 due to the system of dual track approach, but coal sold to electricity was still tightly controlled by government-guided pricing. Then the paper examines electricity investment and tariff reform. Unlike coal, entry to electricity generation sector was gradually relaxed but generation and retailing tariffs are still strictly regulated. As energy demand and prices soared after 2002, coal and electricity enterprises are all unsatisfied with the rule of price setting of coal sold to electricity industry. This paper concludes that the deliberate low coal price policy does protect electricity industry from fuel cost fluctuation but harm coal industry. Allocative and productive efficiency are difficult to achieve in the long run.
Keywords
Electricity , Coal , China
Journal title
Energy Policy
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Energy Policy
Record number
971810
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