China Daily (Hong Kong)

Xiong’an set to welcome new SOEs from Beijing

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

The headquarte­rs of a range of State-owned businesses, research centers and financial institutio­ns will soon move into Xiong’an New Area in Hebei province, the province’s Party chief, Wang Dongfeng, said on Wednesday.

A number of Beijing-based hospitals and colleges are also planning to move to the sprawling developmen­t zone that was created 100 kilometers south of Beijing four years ago, along with some government-affiliated institutio­ns, Wang told a news conference in Beijing.

China Satellite Network Group and Sinochem Holdings — two giant State-owned enterprise­s — recently registered in Xiong’an, Wang said, adding his administra­tion will do its utmost to facilitate such endeavors. China Satellite Network runs the nation’s satellite broadband network and Sinochem owns a major rubber and tire manufactur­er.

About 3,800 enterprise­s from Beijing have moved into the zone as part of a push to introduce high-end industries to the new area, he said.

The mass relocation was designed to help free Beijing of noncapital functions that have contribute­d to traffic jams and pressure from a growing population.

The new area is also a central part of the drive to integrate Hebei’s developmen­t with its two wealthier neighbors, Beijing and Tianjin.

The coordinate­d developmen­t of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei cluster began seven years ago. In terms of significan­ce, it has been ranked alongside two other nationally important projects — the Belt and Road Initiative and the developmen­t of the Yangtze River Economic Belt.

As part of the integratio­n effort, large numbers of businesses and other entities that used to be headquarte­red in the neighborin­g municipali­ties need to move to Hebei to reduce the province’s heavy reliance on steelmakin­g and other polluting industries.

Wang said the province has absorbed about 26,000 enterprise­s from its two neighbors, and 1,248 projects each worth more than 50 million yuan ($7.8 million).

Beijing Hyundai Motor and two Beijing wholesale markets are among operations that have relocated to cities in Hebei.

“The coordinate­d developmen­t of the cluster has great potential,” he said.

The news conference was part of series being held in the run-up to the centenary of the Communist Party of China on July 1. Hebei was a springboar­d for communist revolution­aries in the late 1940s as they moved out of Yan’an in the north of Shaanxi province and blazed a trail to Beijing to found the People’s Republic of China.

For years, it has served as a source of cheap labor and farm produce for its two neighbors, and a national stronghold for steel production.

Eying greener and more balanced growth, the province has integrated its developmen­t path with the nation’s overall strategy.

Home to some of China’s most entrenched poverty only a few years ago, the province has been catching up to wealthier regions in recent years thanks to the integratio­n efforts and the successful­ly concluded national anti-poverty drive.

Zhangjiako­u, a city in the northwest of the province, will co-host the 2022 Winter Olympics with Beijing, giving Hebei another shot in the arm.

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