China Daily

Livestream helps reboot Hubei

- By HE QI in Shanghai and LIU KUN in Wuhan Contact the writers at heqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Livestream­ing celebrity Li Jiaqi held a special show on Thursday featuring products from Hubei province to help the province’s enterprise­s and retailers recover from months of being locked down.

Products promoted during the show included beef and hot dry noodles — of which 160,000 boxes were sold during the livestream.

More than 13.5 million people tuned in to the show, which lasted two and a half hours.

“This special livestream­ing is to encourage companies and brands in Hubei province to resume production,” said Li, who first made his name selling lipstick on Taobao and has over half a million fans on several major livestream­ing platforms and lifestyle apps.

As an important agricultur­al production base in the nation, Hubei province is known for rice, oils, vegetables, fruit, tea and aquatic products.

However, the export of its agricultur­al products has been blocked due to the outbreak of COVID-19.

Hubei province announced on Tuesday that it will reopen Wuhan’s transporta­tion connection­s to areas outside the city on April 8. It lifted traffic controls in other parts of the province on Wednesday.

With the epidemic gradually coming under control, many featured products in Hubei province have begun to be sold and circulated.

As the main production region for crawfish — accounting for almost half of the nation’s production — Hubei province is suffering from an oversupply of crawfish.

Through many efforts, the crawfish in Hubei province has been successful­ly sold to more than 360 cities across the country, and the daily sales volume reached 710 metric tons on Thursday, according to the latest statistics from the Hubei Agricultur­al Developmen­t Center.

“About 65 percent of people have resumed working in the crawfish trading market in Qianjiang, with more than 1,500 workers returning to work as of Thursday,” said Zhang

Chuanyin, director of the agricultur­al developmen­t center in Qianjiang, Hubei province, a major crawfish production base.

According to Zhang, 58 logistics lines have been restored, including to Beijing, Shanghai, and Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces, and 5,511 tons of crawfish have been transporte­d throughout the country.

E-commerce platforms such as Jingdong, Pinduoduo and Taobao have also launched special sales sectors and opened livestream­ing for agricultur­al enterprise­s in Hubei province for free.

About 1,019 tons of local oranges were sold through the e-commerce platforms from March 17 to 22.

Meanwhile, China Tea Industry purchased more than 800 tons of tea from Hubei province.

Food and snacks enterprise­s were also involved in the promotion, including Bestore, which runs over 2,400 stores across the country and is expected to purchase agricultur­al products from Hubei.

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