China's construction ban still par for the golf course

Golfing industry has huge potential despite laws against building greens.

Banned since 2004 in China for being "too bourgeois", golf-course construction has been secretly booming, senior land superintendents said on Tuesday.

Li Jianqin, head of the law enforcement and supervision department with the Ministry of Land and Resources, warned that an approved plan to build golf courses in Hainan province as it becomes a global resort does not mean others can ignore the ban.
 
The central government imposed a moratorium in 2004 to protect the country's shrinking land resources from becoming golf courses, and all courses opening after 2004 are illegal, he added during a press conference in Beijing.

Detecting illegal courses is top of the agenda for the ministry, Li said.

In 2008, Yitong Coalification Co Ltd in Erdos in Inner Mongolia was found to have built a golf course and related entertaining buildings on a 60-hectare piece of land.

On May 25, 2009, Shenyang Lixiangxincheng Property Company and Shenyang Aerolite Mountain Forestry Sports Ltd Co were fined nearly 15 million yuan ($2.2 million) for building a golf course, and all the buildings were demolished with about 7.4 hectares of land reclaimed.

In November 2009, Xinde Real Estate Development Company in Wuhu, Anhui province, was fined more than 15 million yuan for building a 284-hectare entertainment center including a 32-hectare golf course.

On Nov 30, 2009, the Ministry of Land and Resources publicized two illegal golf courses in Hebei and Zhejiang provinces and the misused land has been reclaimed.

With barely one-tenth of a hectare of farmland per capita in China, it is too extravagant to build a golf course that occupies 40 to 50 hectares of land and uses at least 3,000 cubic meters of water every day just for grass maintenance, experts said.

It is estimated that China has at least 20 million potential golfers, with the golfing industry, including the courses and equipment manufacturers, netting a whopping 60 billion yuan in 2009.

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