Chinese cities call for bids to dismantle makeshift Covid hospitals and recycle materials

Several Chinese cities have opened the bidding for firms to tear down makeshift hospitals built quickly during the Covid-19 pandemic, according to domestic media outlet Caixin.

Advertisement

Local authorities have been working to remove the facilities, with materials and equipment up for auction since last year, according to Caixin which cited public resource trading platforms.

The former makeshift hospitals, known as fangcang, to be removed are mostly those assembled from containers and placed in suburbs. Local authorities, supported mainly by government funds, aim to recycle materials and equipment from the facilities.

image

03:49

Life inside China’s rapidly built hospitals in Wuhan, the epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak

Life inside China’s rapidly built hospitals in Wuhan, the epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak

Under China’s zero-Covid policy, a large number of temporary hospitals were set up to achieve Beijing’s goal of accommodating all Covid-19 patients, regardless of how severe their symptoms were. In late 2022, mandatory quarantine requirements were lifted and makeshift hospitals across the country were left empty.

Domestic media reports have noted that dealing with these temporary buildings has been a “difficult problem to solve” for local governments. Over the past two years, hundreds of makeshift hospitals have been transformed, with some becoming official medical facilities and others dismantled.

According to the Caixin report, the bidding documents show that some cities require contractors to carry out protective dismantling of reusable materials and equipment before transferring some of the materials to government departments that will coordinate their recycling by state-owned enterprises.

Advertisement

Other cities say the materials belong to the winning bidder that dismantles the buildings and restores the site.

In a case in Dongguan in southern China’s Guangdong province, a local recycling company this month won the bid to dispose of a facility’s electrical cables for about 5.9 million yuan (US$815,000).

  

Read More

Leave a Reply