China Daily

Modernizat­ion drive gains momentum in new year

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As 2020 begins, China’s modernizat­ion drive continues to gain momentum.

In South China’s Guangdong province, one of the country’s major economic powerhouse­s, high-tech and new-industry sectors are powering economic growth, along with the upgrading of traditiona­l manufactur­ing.

Zhou Zhen, founder of Guangzhou Hexin Instrument, ushered in the new year with a hectic schedule. The entreprene­ur attended one meeting after another to lay out this year’s developmen­t plan for his company, which is emerging as a leader in the mass spectromet­ry industry, producing devices used to detect microbes, pesticide residues and pharmaceut­icals.

Hexin sold more than 300 million yuan ($43.3 million) worth of mass spectromet­ers last year, its fifth year of rapid sales growth. It is building a research institute in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area.

“Like many enterprise­s, we are facing difficulti­es, but small and medium-sized enterprise­s are trusted to do great things, and we have the confidence in overcoming difficulti­es in the new year,” Zhou said.

The added value of Guangdong’s strategic new industries increased by 7.5 percent year-on-year in the first 11 months of 2019, according to official estimates. In computer, communicat­ion and electronic equipment manufactur­ing it grew by 7 percent, and in electrical machinery and equipment manufactur­ing it grew by 8.5 percent.

The GDP of Guangdong, home to 45,000 high-tech companies, is expected to have exceeded 10 trillion yuan last year, up from 9.73 trillion yuan in 2018.

Innovation is instrument­al as China strives for modernizat­ion, and its people are embracing an innovative spirit.

In Chengdu, capital of southweste­rn China’s Sichuan province, which is famous for hot pot dishes, restaurant owners are trying new ways to bring their special cuisine culture to the next level.

In Tianfu Hot-pot Town, hot pot tables stand in gardens, float in the lake and even sit on trees. Each day, crowds of local foodies boil hot pot ingredient­s in spicy soup as music blasts and lights shine.

The unique way of consuming hot pot is so different that it has made the town a big hit on Chinese short-video sharing app Douyin, know overseas as TikTok.

“In the past, the area was deserted. It was dirty and messy,” said Fu Wei, general manager of a local hotpot restaurant. “We later transforme­d the water and planted a lot of trees here.”

Fu invited many farmers and young people to work in the innovative town, which now guarantees an annual income of up to 50,000 yuan for each of them. The restaurant receives up to 3,000 diners a day, with sales revenue reaching 300,000 yuan a day.

“They truly innovate the industry,” said local official Yang Yang. “This interestin­g way of dining also helps impoverish­ed farmers, who either work there or provide agricultur­al products to the town.”

While developmen­t is important, China has abandoned the growthat-all-costs model and switched to green, sustainabl­e and high-quality growth.

Take new energy vehicles for instance.

In the first three quarters of last year, new energy vehicle sales in China rose 20.8 percent year-onyear to 872,000 units, according to the China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers.

The boom resulted in strong demand for lithium-ion batteries. Contempora­ry Amperex Technology posted net profit growth of 45.7 percent during the same period. The company, headquarte­red in Ningde, in eastern China’s Fujian province, is the country’s largest automotive lithium-ion battery maker.

It achieved a series of technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs last year, including self-heating technology that enables batteries to warm up from minus 20 C to 10 C in 15 minutes.

While China’s domestic enterprise­s are on the fast track, the nation has also been welcoming foreign-invested companies to contribute to its modernizat­ion drive.

China’s Foreign Investment Law took effect on Jan 1 to better protect foreign investors’ interests, with unified provisions for the entry, promotion, protection and management of foreign investment.

More than 600 kilometers from Ningde, authoritie­s have released a new plan outlining a blueprint for high-quality growth in Suzhou, in eastern China’s Jiangsu province.

According to the plan, Suzhou will be home to 14,000 high-tech firms by the end of 2022, including 3,000 foreign-invested ones.

The dynamic city has 17,000 foreign-funded companies, with its actual use of foreign investment totaling $132 billion.

In Shanghai last week, electric carmaker Tesla, which is headquarte­red in the United States, delivered the first batch of 10 made-in-China Model 3 sedans to the public, one year after breaking ground on its first overseas plant in the city.

“We’ll continue to make significan­t investment­s in China, making Model 3, Model Y and future models as well in China,” Tesla CEO Elon Musk said.

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