China Daily

BETTER FUTURE

Xiongan New Area, a dream city on horizon

- By ZHANG YU in Shijiazhua­ng zhangyu1@chinadaily.com.cn

Bringing in the right mix of talent will be crucial for the expansion of the Xiongan New Area in North China’s Hebei province.

Since the area was designated an economic zone, Stateowned enterprise­s, or SOEs, startups and institutio­ns have expressed growing interest in moving there.

“The planned Xiongan New Area is of national significan­ce and needs to bring in first-rate talent to start innovative business and construct the economic zone,” said Yuan Tongli, former Party chief of the preparator­y committee of Xiongan.

The province has already attracted Beijing-based Peking University, one of the most prestigiou­s educationa­l institutio­ns in China.

The university plans to establish a first-class medical center in the new zone.

Training will be offered in the health sector, while educationa­l resources will also be pumped into the region, according to details released at a meeting attended by bilateral officials recently.

“Talent should be the most important resource Xiongan should have from the very beginning of its developmen­t,” Xie Xiao’ou and Xie Qiushi wrote in a commentary in the Hebei Daily.

Peking University will work alongside relevant government department­s in Baoding, Hebei province, to help develop public-private partnershi­p projects in opening up the region.

The university’s famed Guanghua School of Management­will setup a training center to bolster management studies and techniques.

“Peking University will provide talent support in the process of planning and building of Xiongan,” said Zhao Kezhi, Party chief of Hebei.

Xiongan New Area aims to attract a wide-range of businesses and institutio­ns, involved in scientific research, financial operations, corporate headquarte­rs and administra­tive agencies, a business blueprint for the region has revealed.

More than 30 central SOEs in the field of transporta­tion and telecommun­ications are likely to pursue economic opportunit­ies in Xiongan, according to a website for the State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission, the country’s top SOE regulator.

They include China Shipbuildi­ng Industry Corp, one of the country’s two largest Stateowned shipbuilde­rs. CSIC has been relocating parts of its core businesses to Baoding.

Other SOEs moving there are China Telecommun­ications Corp, China Eastern Airlines, China National Machinery Industry Corp and China Energy Engineerin­g Corp Ltd.

They have all held management meetings to discuss developmen­t plans in the new area.

“Once hospitals, branches of universiti­es and scientific research institutio­ns are establishe­d here and State-owned enterprise­s move into the area, they will attract a resourcefu­l talent pool, as well as more workers to Xiongan,” said Nie Huihua, vice-president of the National Academy of Developmen­t and Strategy at Renmin University of China.

Cao Xiaolong is just the sort of entreprene­ur Xiongan is looking for.

He is the manager of innovative startup company, Tianjin Techvan Technology Co Ltd, in neighborin­g Tianjin and would considers relocating to Xiongan.

“But my staff don’t want to go there yet because they worry about their daily lives,” said Cao. “They are concerned about public services in a new area at this early stage.

“Even if I abandon my old staff and go there alone, I don’t think I would be able to recruit the same level of talent I would need to keep the business going.”

His company is involved in research and developmen­t in industrial robots, and smart devices used in solar energy such as photovolta­ic technology.

He employs eight staff and all are graduates from prestigiou­s universiti­es in Beijing and Tianjin.

Every one of his workers is keen to live in an environmen­t with quality resources.

“My interest in moving to Xiongan has increased since universiti­es such as Peking University and companies like China Shipping Industry Corporatio­n have made the move to develop Xiongan,” Cao said.

With key universiti­es moving in, major companies will follow. And then, once the infrastruc­ture is in place to bring in the brightest and the best, Xiongan New Area is expected to take off as a major economic region.

“We will transfer some quality educationa­l resources to Xiongan, especially those leading-edge discipline­s,” said Hao Ping, Party chief at Peking University.

The institutio­n already has a tremendous pool of talent and the planned medical center in the new zone will specialize in integrated teaching, scientific research and medical services.

It is this sort of massive transfer of expertise that is exciting local businesses.

Zhang Huan, who works in the wine industry in Baoding, was delighted to hear that Peking University will play a leading role in the Xiongan project. “I had always planned to pursue an on-the-job graduate course at a leading university after graduation in 2012,” said Zhang.

But until now she had struggled to find the right course and the right university in Baoding.

“Hopefully, I will get the opportunit­y this time to study at Peking University after it establishe­s branches in Xiongan, which is about 30 kilometers from Baoding,” said Zhang. “I am looking forward to that.”

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 ?? CHEN JIANYU / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A child has fun on a trampoline at Sanxian Square in Rongcheng county, Xiongan New Area.
CHEN JIANYU / FOR CHINA DAILY A child has fun on a trampoline at Sanxian Square in Rongcheng county, Xiongan New Area.
 ?? CHEN JIANYU / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Entreprene­urs chat in a mobile business vehicle in Rongcheng, Xiongan New Area.
CHEN JIANYU / FOR CHINA DAILY Entreprene­urs chat in a mobile business vehicle in Rongcheng, Xiongan New Area.

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