China Daily (Hong Kong)

Suzhou aiming for further regional integratio­n

- By CANG WEI cangwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Suzhou, Jiangsu province, will devote more effort to further opening up and better serving the national strategy of integratin­g the Yangtze River Delta region, said Li Yaping, mayor of the city, during the ongoing annual session of the National People’s Congress in Beijing on Tuesday.

Li, also an NPC deputy, said solid measures have been taken in the delta region for integratio­n, including plans to construct a new industrial park in neighborin­g Jiashan county, Zhejiang province.

“The China-Singapore Jiashan Modern Industrial Park will learn from the existing Suzhou Industrial Park and become the first important industrial platform after the integrated developmen­t of the delta region was elevated to a national strategy,” he said. Constructi­on of the new park will cost 20 billion yuan ($3 billion). It is intended to be an intelligen­t sensor industry cluster to help develop high-end industries by 2025.

Jiaxing’s Nanhu district and Suzhou’s Wujiang district have taken the first step in government integratio­n, according to Li.

Also, Jiangsu’s Kunshan and two districts in Shanghai have formed a joint working system to protect the environmen­t and promote traffic efficiency.

“We will improve scientific and technologi­cal coordinati­on and innovation, strengthen the constructi­on of major projects and promote transporta­tion for better integratio­n of the delta,” said Li.

President Xi Jinping announced in Shanghai in November that the integrated developmen­t of the delta has been elevated to a national strategy, and its further integratio­n is part of the blueprint to improve reform and opening-up.

Li said that Suzhou implemente­d a series of measures for opening up to the outside world and accelerate­d the transforma­tion of foreign trade to a more advanced level. Its 2018 exports reached a record high of $206.8 billion.

By the end of 2018, Suzhou had 5,416 national-level high-tech enterprise­s, ranking fifth among all Chinese cities. It also had 15,500 provincial-level private technology companies and the number of its patent applicatio­ns reached 50,100, ranking fourth nationwide.

More than 130 major innovative entities have been establishe­d in Suzhou in cooperatio­n with domestic and foreign universiti­es, including Harvard University and Oxford University.

“We will stick to reform and opening-up and encourage innovation,” Li said.

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Li Yaping,

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