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Hong Kong Will Add Artificial Islands To Tackle House Crisis

The government will aim to reclaim 1,700 acres off Lantau Island, the city’s Chief Executive Lam said.

Hong Kong Will Add Artificial Islands To Tackle House Crisis
Boats sit moored at the typhoon shelter as residential apartment blocks stand beyond in Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Paul Yeung/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Hong Kong will add artificial islands to counter a runaway property market that’s made the city the world’s least affordable for housing.

The government will aim to reclaim 1,700 acres (688 hectares) off Lantau Island, the city’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam said Wednesday in a policy address. That compares with the 1,670 acres of extra land that a previous government report estimated the city needed through 2046.

“Finding land is the pressing problem that we need to tackle urgently,” Lam told the city’s legislators. “We must make bold decisions.”

Also in Lam’s policy address:

  • Ban on e-cigarettes; extensions to maternity leave; call for listed firms to have more female directors; economic growth of 3-4% should be achievable this year; pilot water-taxi service to start between Central and Kowloon
  • Lam vows no “blind eye” to advocates of Hong Kong independence; pledges to listen to views on contentious proposed Article 23 security law

Land reclamation in notoriously crowded Hong Kong has long been a controversial option to boost the supply of homes due to environmental concerns. But public outrage over a crisis in housing affordability is encouraging officials to act, even as the property market is showing signs of cooling after years of stratospheric gains.

To mitigate opposition to reclamation, Lam has said most of such land will be earmarked for subsidized housing. As many as 1.1 million people could live on the artificial islands, she said. That’s about 15 percent of Hong Kong’s current population. The first phase of reclamation work would start in 2025, with people able to move in by 2032, Lam said.

Hong Kong Will Add Artificial Islands To Tackle House Crisis

Other measures would include: allocating about 70 percent of new land to public housing; moving faster to convert so-called brownfields sites, such as deserted rural land in the New Territories, to residential use; and setting up a land sharing pilot program that could turn land held by developers into projects that accommodate both public and private housing.

An almost 15-year bull run in prices prompted UBS Group AG to last month name Hong Kong as the city most at risk of a housing bubble. Still, rising mortgage costs -- the city’s prime rate was increased for the first time in more than a decade last month -- have weakened sentiment and banks are beginning to trim their property valuations.

--With assistance from Jasmine Wang, Stephen Tan, Dominic Lau and Fion Li.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shawna Kwan in Hong Kong at wkwan35@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Katrina Nicholas at knicholas2@bloomberg.net, Paul Panckhurst

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