China Daily

Investment in Xinjiang textile industry booming

Manufactur­ers are expected to create 100,000 jobs this year

- By CUI JIA in Beijing and MAO WEIHUA in Urumqi Contact the writers at cuijia@chinadaily.com.cn

The Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region has become the most popular destinatio­n for investors in the textile industry, a regional trade official said.

The official said the region plans to attract more laborinten­sive businesses with preferenti­al policies to create job opportunit­ies for locals.

“An average of two new textile factories were set up in Xinjiang every day last year. We expect to see more this year,” said Yin Xiaodong, director of the regional textile industry management office.

With preferenti­al policies, including lower raw cotton prices, cheaper electricit­y rates and transporta­tion subsidies, every metric ton of cotton yarn produced in Xinjiang can save manufactur­ers 3,600 yuan ($520) compared with eastern China where the textile industry traditiona­lly flourished, Yin said.

The autonomous region now has more than 1,800 textile factories.

Investment in the region’s textile industry reached 47.9 billion yuan last year, an increase of 51 percent compared with 2015, according to data released on Monday by the regional statistics bureau.

A total of 112,300 workers were recruited to the region’s textile sector last year, accounting for more than 50 percent of new industrial jobs.

The region expects textile manufactur­ers to create 100,000 more jobs this year, accounting for one-quarter of all new jobs, according to Yin.

In 2014, the central government began providing support for the textile and garment industry in Xinjiang, which produces about 60 percent of China’s raw cotton, in the hope of boosting employment opportunit­ies for locals.

Yin estimates that investment in the industry in the past three years has exceeded 90 billion yuan, equivalent to the total investment between 1978 and 2013.

Three of the five planned textile industrial centers are in southern Xinjiang, a key battlegrou­nd in China’s fight against terrorism. The regional government has said unemployme­nt and poverty are key factors that drive young people to become involved in terrorist activities.

Most of the cotton yarn produced in the region is transporte­d to eastern China, the country’s traditiona­l textile center, to be processed into cloth and clothes before it is exported by sea.

 ?? WEI HAI / XINHUA ?? A worker uses a spinning wheel to produce silk in Hotan, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, in November.
WEI HAI / XINHUA A worker uses a spinning wheel to produce silk in Hotan, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, in November.

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