Clear The Air News Blog Rotating Header Image

February 25th, 2009:

50% Tobacco Tax Increase

The Financial Secretary today announced that the excise duty on tobacco products will be immediately increased by 50% to HK$ 24 per pack above the current levels of just over HK$ 16 per pack.

Whilst we have sought a 100% tax increase, Clear the Air estimates that the new increased tax will hopefully:

– Reduce current adult smoking significantly

– Reduce current youth smoking by a significant amount and prevent our non smoking youth starting their addiction due to peer pressure

The Hong Kong Administration must now capitalize on this tax increase and move towards making Hong Kong the world’s leading non smoking territory.

Read the full Media Release here: http://tobacco.cleartheair.org.hk/2009/02/25/50-tobacco-tax-increase/

烟草税增加50%

財政司司長今天宣佈立即增加烟草稅50%,即每包香烟的烟草稅由現時的16元調高至24元。

爭氣行動一向要求政府增加烟草稅100%,雖然增幅未達我們的要求,我們預期新調高的稅率將會:

– 令成年烟民的數目明顯減少

– 令青少年烟民的數目明顯減少,從而防止青少年因受朋輩壓力去開始吸烟

香港政府應利用這次加稅的決定向前邁進令香港成為領導世界的無烟城市。

要看完整的新聞稿請點擊以下連接:
http://tobacco.cleartheair.org.hk/2009/02/25/50-tobacco-tax-increase/

Sustainable Features Offer Viable Option

Fulton Mak – Updated on Feb 25, 2009 – SCMP

Green features are still hard to find in Hong Kong’s concrete jungle, despite the rhetoric on sustainable and ecologically friendly construction and mounting concerns about environmental protection.

The chief obstacles to going green highlighted in a number of surveys are perceptions among developers of higher initial costs and a longer payback period.

But the truth is that sustainable features are not necessarily more expensive and some are already being introduced with the promise of showing immediate cost savings, say supporters.

Structural auditing, they added, was one of the invisible green measures that could produce immediate results.

Simply put, structural auditing involves establishing a group of experts including structural engineers to vet a project proposal and recommend modifications or a redesign of a building’s structural framework.

The auditing process may be conducted not only on projects still on the drawing board but also on those already under construction, according to Hossein Rezai-Jorabi, group director at Web Structures, a civil, structural and geotechnical engineering consultancy.

“We have shown that it makes construction easier and more cost-effective. Average savings can total about 30 per cent of the structural cost of the building,” said Mr Rezai-Jorabi. “This translates into something like 5 per cent of total construction costs, including architectural fees.”

Helping clients minimise expenses is a priority, said Mr Rezai-Jorabi. In addition, the objective is to be at the forefront of the environmental protection movement and to reduce pollution.

By way of example, he said, through modifying the structural design, the use of steel reinforcement could be significantly reduced to between 100 and 150 kilograms of steel reinforcement per cubic metre of concrete, compared with an industry norm of 150kg to 200kg.

Such a saving would depend on the building’s structure, height, and the type of materials used, but the multiplier effect of the savings would help make significant reductions in pollution arising from producing steel and cement, as well as the transportation required to get the materials to construction sites.

An example of the green trend in construction is the newly built One Island East.

When designing and building this 70-storey commercial property in Quarry Bay, Swire Properties employed building information modelling and building life-cycle management to reduce costs and construction time, and to increase efficiency and reduce waste.

With the help of 3D design software, virtual buildings can be built and procured on a computer allowing identification of design co-ordination errors, reducing construction waste, and improving material procurement, labour resourcing and overall site productivity, according to a report by CLSA U, an executive education research programme of the brokerage and investment bank headquartered in Hong Kong.

This allows the team to eliminate 15 to 25 per cent of construction waste and reduce construction costs by 10 per cent.

Meanwhile, concrete crushers were used during demolition of the previous buildings on the site and a waste management plan was adopted to facilitate recycling, with the result that only 1 per cent of waste was disposed of in landfills compared with an average industry standard of 20 to 30 per cent.

The new building uses indirect office lighting designed with adjustable illumination levels that reduces energy consumption by up to 60 per cent, and extra large low-emissivity glazing panels that ensure maximum light penetration with minimum energy loss, heat gain and noise.

The result is that One Island East secured the highest platinum rating of the Building Environmental Assessment Method.