A few days ago, a construction stone limestone mining right in Jiangshan City, Zhejiang Province, was successfully transferred, with a total turnover of 211.37 million yuan, a record high for the transfer of mining rights in the city, with a transfer period of 10 years and an annual production scale of 3.3 million tons.
The sale is the first comprehensive development and utilization project of the mine in Jiangshan City - the mining rights of the limestone mine for construction stone in the Wujialing Mine Comprehensive Development and Utilization Project in Sidu Town.
It is understood that the total area of the Wujialing Mine Comprehensive Development and Utilization Project Area in Sidu Town is 1.2344 square kilometers, of which the abandoned mine ecological restoration area is the core area of the project, with a total area of 0.4954 square kilometers, and the mining rights transferred this time are located in this area. The project will form about 560 mu of mining land through ecological restoration of abandoned mines, and reclaim 183 mu of rural homesteads. After that, the 743 mu of land was then introduced and cultivated through measures such as reclamation of cultivated land and land circulation to promote rural revitalization.
In addition, the project also involves the relocation and resettlement of six natural villages in Sidu Village, including Changling, Jiaoqian, Wangtan, Zhengjialang, Shangwulang and Shangyu Village, as well as the policy processing work involved within the mining area. Within one month from the date of signing the "Guarantee Agreement for Entering the Construction", the bidder for mining rights shall pay a total of about 216.7 million yuan in township policy processing fees to the people's governments of Sidu Town and Shangyu Town.
According to the relevant person in charge of the Jiangshan Municipal Natural Resources and Planning Bureau, the implementation of this comprehensive utilization project of mining land will not only enable the government to obtain the corresponding benefits from the transfer of mining rights, but also deepen the intensive use of land conservation, improve the ecological environment, and lay a solid foundation for vigorously developing new economic formats and promoting rural revitalization.