China Daily (Hong Kong)

‘Three cities’ to sustain growth in Guangdong

- By ZHENG CAIXIONG in Guangzhou and LIU WEILING in Shantou, Guangdong Contact the writers at zhengcaixi­ong@chinadaily.com.cn

South China’s Guangdong province is expecting Zhuhai, Shantou and Zhanjiang to accelerate their developmen­t pace and play an even bigger role in the region’s overall economic growth.

Zhu Wei, deputy director of the Guangdong Provincial Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said Guangdong, one of the country’s economic powerhouse­s, has entered a fast developmen­t path and it would be far from enough if the province merely relies on the rapid developmen­t of the Pearl River Delta, led by Guangzhou and Shenzhen.

The province achieved a gross domestic product of more than 11 trillion yuan ($1.69 trillion) last year.

Zhu said the provincial government has released special documents and policies to encourage and support the three cities to speed up economic constructi­on and become new engines for economic growth.

According to Zhu, Zhuhai, located at the mouth of the Pearl River, will become a modern internatio­nal special economic zone with Chinese characteri­stics and a demonstrat­ion zone for greater cooperatio­n between Guangdong and Macao.

Shantou in the eastern part of Guangdong will be developed as a dynamic special economic zone, while Zhanjiang, a port city in Leizhou Peninsula in the western part of Guangdong, is expected to become a provincial pivotal city and an important developmen­t pole of the coastal economy.

Zhang Yisheng, vice-mayor of Zhuhai, said Zhuhai will seek to strengthen the convergenc­e and integratio­n of policies, rules, livelihood projects and public affairs with Macao while enhancing infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty and widening its developmen­t space.

Meanwhile, Zhuhai will try to become a high-speed railway hub in the western Pearl River Delta and help bring Macao into the country’s advanced high-speed railway network. Constructi­on of a light rail track linking Macao and Zhuhai has already started, Zhang said.

Shuang Dehui, executive deputy mayor of Shantou, said Shantou, one of the major hometowns of overseas Chinese, will accelerate constructi­on of regional innovation centers in the coming months.

“Shantou will also make use of its unique advantages of numerous overseas Chinese who are now living and working in more than 100 nations and regions around the world, to further upgrade its reform and opening-up and build the city into a new destinatio­n for overseas economic cooperatio­n through opening-up and innovation,” Shuang said.

Shuang said Shantou intends to further bolster cooperatio­n with ASEAN, its largest trade partner. Last year, Shantou’s imports from ASEAN grew 32.2 percent, while exports increased 31.3 percent on a yearly basis. The official said more than 70 percent of the overseas Chinese from Shantou live in the ASEAN region.

Cao Xing, executive vice-mayor of Zhanjiang, said the city will expand cooperatio­n with Hainan island, the country’s largest special economic zone and a big free trade port, to tap the global market in the future.

“Zhanjiang will spare no effort to enhance its ties with Hainan on free trade ports, communicat­ions, logistics, modern services and related infrastruc­ture industries.”

Zhanjiang and Hainan will jointly build a special cooperatio­n zone between Guangdong and Hainan provinces in Xuwen county, located at the southernmo­st tip of Leizhou peninsula to develop the coastal economy. Last year, Zhanjiang and Hainan’s container throughput reached 377,000 twenty-foot equivalent­s, up by 41.7 percent on a yearly basis. Zhanjiang is also home to gigantic projects of Baosteel, Zhongke (Guangdong) integrated refinery and petrochemi­cal project and BASF’s smart Verbund petrochemi­cal project.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? The container terminal in Shantou, Guangdong province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY The container terminal in Shantou, Guangdong province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China