China Daily (Hong Kong)

Li calls for new kind of industrial revolution

- By ZHANG YUNBI zhangyunbi@ chinadaily.com.cn

Premier Li Keqiang has called on developing countries to seek “a new type of industrial­ization” and pay more attention to transforma­tion and environmen­tally friendly developmen­t.

He made the remarks on Tuesday in a video message sent to mark the opening of the 15th General Conference of the United Nations Industrial Developmen­t Organizati­on in Lima, Peru.

About 1,000 representa­tives from 172 countries are attending the meeting, which is featuring the theme: “Toward partnershi­p for a new industrial revolution for inclusive and sustainabl­e developmen­t”.

The conference highlights the theme with the additional motto of “An urgent task”, challengin­g all member states to take action, Li said.

The key to achieving the goals of the meeting lies in advancing the level of industrial­ization in developing countries, improving the livelihood­s of ordinary people and lifting more people out of poverty, he said.

Jiko Luveni, Fiji’s minister for social welfare, women and poverty alleviatio­n told the conference that as the world approaches the Post- 2015 Developmen­t Agenda, the internatio­nal community must reinforce its commitment to poverty eradicatio­n.

“Poverty eradicatio­n remains the greatest global challenge today and is an indispensa­ble requiremen­t for sustainabl­e developmen­t,” said Luveni.

Establishe­d by the UN General Assembly in 1966, the Vienna-based UNIDO is mandated to promote industrial developmen­t and cooperatio­n. It became a specialize­d agency of the United Nations in 1985 when the first Lima Declaratio­n was adopted.

In June, Li Yong, the former Chinese vice-minister of finance was elected as the new director-general of UNIDO, the first Chinese official to head the organizati­on.

In his address on Tuesday, Li suggested that member states should focus more on resource conservati­on and environmen­tal protection, boosting innovation in management methods and encouragin­g technologi­cal progress.

“Let global industries upgrade in the process of developmen­t and develop in the process of upgrading,” Li said.

United Nations SecretaryG­eneral Ban Ki- moon said at the conference on Monday that “the world cannot achieve the Millennium Developmen­t Goals if it does not achieve other goals involving the sustainabl­e industrial developmen­t of all the countries around the world”.

On the subject of China’s domestic economy, Li stressed that Beijing will “continue placing priorities on developmen­t and people’s livelihood”.

China will “further deepen its reform and opening- up, seek momentum from innovation, optimize the structure of industries and base its pursuit of a new type of industrial­ization on national conditions,” he said.

Almost 40 years ago, member states gathered in Peru and adopted the Lima Declaratio­n on Industrial Developmen­t and Cooperatio­n, which aimed to increase the developing countries’ share of world industrial production. It also paved the way for UNIDO to become a UN specialize­d agency. Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

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