SHANGHAI, Oct 12 (Reuters) - China stocks fell on Tuesday as coal stocks dropped amid government efforts to urge firms to step-up output. Hong Kong shares lost ground, dragged by tech giants.

** The CSI300 index fell 0.7% to 4,903.61 points at the end of the morning session, while the Shanghai Composite Index lost 1% to 3,554.38 points.

** The Hang Seng index dropped 1% to 25,066.05 points. The Hong Kong China Enterprises Index lost 1.2% to 8,891.36.

** The coal sub-index dropped 2.8% as China increased its efforts to boost coal output amid short supply, which has led to China's worst power crunch in years.

** China will set a timetable and road map for meeting its carbon emissions target, and correct "one-size-fits-all" practices of power cuts and production limits in some areas, state TV quoted Chinese premier Li Keqiang on Monday.

** The power-intensive industries non-ferrous metal , chemicals, steel declined between 2.5% and 3.4%.

** The semiconductors, infrastructure , media and broker sectors shed more than 2% each.

** Bucking the trend, real estate firms and banks rose 2.3% and 0.6%, respectively.

** "We believe the default risks and property market weakness have been largely priced into property stocks," Morgan Stanley said in a note. "Given trough valuations and likelihood of policy easing, we believe risk reward is favorable at current levels."

** In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Tech Index terminated a three-consecutive-session rise and dropped 2.2%.

** E-commerce giant Alibaba Group lost 3.2% after the Wall Street Journal reported Chinese President Xi Jinping is scrutinizing the ties that the country's state banks and other financial institutions have developed with big private companies.

** The healthcare sub-index, the energy sub-index and the industrial sub-index fell more than 1% each.

** Shares of Evergrande New Energy Vehicle Group gained 5.7% after the company said on Monday it aimed to start producing electric vehicles (EV) next year despite an external investment crunch.

(Reporting by Shanghai Newsroom; Editing by Amy Caren Daniel)