Global Times

Foreign buyers flock to fair

Canton event expected to inject confidence

- By GT staff reporters

Going digital for the first time, the twice-yearly China Import and Export Fair, known as the Canton Fair, has drawn a warm response from foreign customers eager to engage with Chinese suppliers despite COVID-19, which has ravaged global trade and many economies.

The Canton Fair, held every spring and fall in Guangzhou, capital of South China's Guangdong Province, is widely seen as a barometer of China's foreign trade.

More than 25,900 companies offering more than 1.8 million products and services will take part in this years' Canton Fair in a brand new digital platform. The event is scheduled to kick off on Monday and last till June 24.

The Canton Fair has seen a growing presence of countries and regions along the routes of Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). The average number of customers from BRI economies has reached 80,000.

Cloud-based introducti­on events have been held with exhibitors from Russia, Mongolia, Indonesia, Jordan and Lebanon to help companies along the routes of the BRI to participat­e.

New Zealand-based businesses are seeking new opportunit­ies that have been opening up in conjunctio­n with the first-ever virtual Canton Fair. Martin Thomson, chairman of the New Zealand China Trade Associatio­n, said that although travel restrictio­ns have disrupted the tourism and education industries, trade with China, especially in primary industries and e-commerce, has been bouncing back. He said that the virtual Canton Fair could bring new opportunit­ies for bilateral economic activities, according to the Xinhua News Agency.

Vladimir Dmitriev, vice president of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Russian Federation, said that the virtual fair will help restore internatio­nal economic and trade exchanges and play an important role in trade cooperatio­n between Russia and China.

For Russian companies, participat­ing in the Canton Fair is a good opportunit­y to keep pace with the latest products from China and other countries.

Wang Yu, a project manager at the Russian-Asian Union of Industrial­ists and Entreprene­urs, a lobby group based in Moscow, told the Global Times Sunday that the Russian companies it represents have maintained long-term cooperatio­n with suppliers in China, and it was via the Canton Fair that the two sides initially got to know one another.

“The latest products are expected to be seen online,” said Wang.

However, it's obvious that the COVID-19 pandemic has crimped consumer demand in Russia, along with the plunge in crude oil prices. “This fair is likely to achieve purchases that are about 70 percent of the previous level,” Wang said.

“For Russia's high-tech industries, the Chinese market is quite an important one,” Wang noted. The Russian Export Center has held talks with people in charge of the import exhibition­s of the Canton Fair in a bid to expand sales of Russian food to China, he added.

This year's Canton Fair will maintain the import exhibition­s. Enterprise­s along the routes of the BRI took up 72 percent with their products accounting for 83 percent, data from the Guangzhou government showed.

“Trade and economic exchanges between China and BRI countries and regions have been a highlight amid disruption­s to global trade caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, and this can offer a new template,” Hong Junjie, a professor at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics, told the Global Times on Sunday.

 ?? VCG Photo: ?? The China Import and Export Fair Complex in Guangzhou, South China's Guangdong Province on Sunday, where the Canton Fair takes place twice every year. This year, much of the fair is going virtual.
VCG Photo: The China Import and Export Fair Complex in Guangzhou, South China's Guangdong Province on Sunday, where the Canton Fair takes place twice every year. This year, much of the fair is going virtual.

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