Beijing Review

An Integrated Fast Track

NPC deputies discuss ways of furthering coordinate­d developmen­t of the BeijingTia­njinHebei region By Yuan Yuan

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Guo Jianying, a National People’s Congress (NPC) deputy and Mayor of Baoding in Hebei Province, bought a bus pass before arriving in Beijing for the First Session of the 13th NPC.

This bus pass is an example of the integratio­n efforts taking place within the areas of Beijing Municipali­ty, Tianjin Municipali­ty and Hebei Province, or as they are known collective­ly the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region. Issued in late 2015, the pass was initially restricted on certain lines within these three areas, but since December 30, 2017, it has given passengers access to almost all bus and subway lines in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region. In Tianjin alone, 12,293 cards had been sold by February 26.

“The coordinate­d developmen­t of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei has brought positive and profound changes to Baoding,” Guo said during a panel discussion of this year’s NPC on March 6 with deputies from Hebei. “The sky is getting bluer, transporta­tion is getting more convenient and we are getting more investment­s from different channels.”

The Xiongan New Area located near Baoding, aiming to help spare Beijing of functions unrelated to its status as the national capital, has given a strong boost to the developmen­t of the city, as Guo said.

Connecting the dots

On March 1, the express rail connecting the Xiongan New Area in Hebei to Beijing started constructi­on and is set to be in operation by the end of 2020. The 92.4-km railway, with a total investment of 33.53 billion yuan ($5.3 billion), will shorten the time from Xiongan to Beijing to 30 minutes, a distance of about 195 km. The time from Xiongan to the Beijing New Airport, which is under constructi­on, will be cut to only 20 minutes.

“This will be a powerful engine for increasing the integratio­n of developmen­t of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei,” Wang Dongfeng, an NPC deputy and Secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Hebei Provincial Committee, said during the panel discussion. “We are looking to create a onehour transporta­tion network in the three areas.”

Also on March 1, senior officials from the Beijing Municipal Commission of Education and the administra­tion of the Xiongan New Area unveiled nameplates for four new schools in Xiongan.

Beijing will build a kindergart­en, two primary schools and a middle school as part of its first educationa­l project in Xiongan. These schools, such as Zhongguanc­un No.3 Primary School and Chaoyang Experiment­al Primary School, are key schools in the capital. Beijing will secure 10 million yuan ($1.58 million) in a specific fund for this project each year.

According to an agreement signed on March 1, both parties will work together to construct key schools, train teachers and improve overall teaching quality. Beijing has agreed to send senior teachers and manage- ment groups to Xiongan to support the initial running of the schools.

Moreover, Beijing will organize a series of training courses in 2018 for teachers and officials from the educationa­l department in Xiongan.

In addition, more than 10 agreements on education cooperatio­n and exchange have been signed among Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei, while eight university unions from the three regions have been organized to promote cooperatio­n on academic research and scientific and technologi­cal innovation.

“Beijing and Tianjin have better and more colleges than Hebei,” Du Yanliang, an NPC deputy, a professor at Shijiazhua­ng Tiedao University in Hebei and an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, said during the panel discussion. “The exchange between professors and students is very necessary to optimize resources. I hope more efforts will be focused on this.”

As an expert on transporta­tion planning, Du said optimizati­on should also be applied to organizing these projects. “Now, rail and road are planned by separate department­s, which can cause possible constructi­on waste,” Du said. “As we expand the area covered by the express railways, we should also place importance on shortening commute times for passengers traveling to the railway stations, especially for people living in remote and rural areas.”

Cai Hua, an NPC deputy and a lawyer from Tianjin Shengli Law Firm, raised another transporta­tion concern. “Cars from other areas in China, including Tianjin and Hebei, have to register to enter Beijing and are restricted to driving in Beijing’s central areas during peak hours, which has caused much inconvenie­nce for the transporta­tion integratio­n,” Cai said. “I hope such restrictio­ns can be discarded in the future as we find other ways of dealing with traffic congestion.”

Making it blue and green

Zhou Wentao, a technician from HBIS Group Co. Ltd., one of China’s largest iron and steel material manufactur­ers and comprehens­ive service suppliers, told Beijing Review that it reduced production in winter 2017 to secure a “blue sky” in the BeijingTia­njin-Hebei region. But as the company

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