China Daily

Machinery makers eye sustainabl­e growth in 2021-25 period

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

The restorativ­e investment and constructi­on projects planned and conducted during China’s 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-25) will create growth momentum, and further spur the structural adjustment and industrial upgrading of China’s machinery manufactur­ing sector, said senior industry officials.

Even though the export front remains difficult and unable to support many Chinese machinery makers on account of the fluctuatin­g COVID-19 pandemic, a number of major projects and policy measures to promote the new dual-circulatio­n developmen­t paradigm will help stabilize the growth of China’s machinery industry.

They will also create market demand, said Chen Bin, executive vice-president of the China Machinery Industry Federation.

China’s new developmen­t paradigm takes the domestic market as the mainstay while allowing the domestic and foreign markets to boost each other. The country aims to develop a large domestic market while also focusing more on valueadded exports, the Ministry of Commerce said.

“Continuing urbanizati­on and large-scale commercial­ization of emerging technologi­es in China are set to drive sustainabl­e growth of consumers, as well as the technology and high-end machinery manufactur­ing sectors,” Chen said.

Even though affected by issues like delayed production, poor logistics conditions and overseas order cancellati­ons, China’s machinery industry posted steady performanc­e in 2020, with revenues and profits beating expectatio­ns.

Profits of machinery manufactur­ers totaled 1.46 trillion yuan ($225.7 billion) in 2020, up 10.4 percent on a yearly basis, from a revenue of 22.85 trillion yuan, up 4.49 percent.

Segments like constructi­on machinery, industrial robot and smart manufactur­ing all saw double-digit growth last year, according to the Beijing-based federation.

As over 600,000 5G base stations were built in 2020, and 462,000 charging pillars were constructe­d for electric cars, Chen said this kind of “new infrastruc­ture” has created a sound platform for the growth of machinery makers.

The better-than-expected performanc­e of the sector was partly due to China’s positive fiscal policies, said Chen, adding the added value of the industry is expected to rise around 5.5 percent year-onyear this year.

Revenues and profits will likely also grow by 4 percent on a yearly basis.

The federation and its member companies will also strive to strike a balance between machinery imports and exports this year, he said.

The CMIF predicted that the production of China’s machinery manufactur­ers will recover fully this year and many of its member companies have already begun to produce equipment and vehicles like negative pressure ambulances, disinfecti­on robots and exhaust fans as part of the world’s fight against the contagion.

Since the government plans to run a nearly 700,000-kilometer transporta­tion network formed by roads, railways, waterways and air routes, build main corridors and passages as the skeleton of national transport network, and establish 100 transport hub cities by 2035, it will create long-term momentum for the country’s machinery makers, especially in the constructi­on machinery sector, business leaders and experts said.

Modern transporta­tion infrastruc­ture facilities can help lowertier Chinese cities, counties and villages ship their agricultur­al and industrial products to other parts of the country as well as other countries efficientl­y, and accommodat­e imports such as production materials, factory equipment and consumer goods at lower costs from ports either within their regions or in other domestic locations, said Luo Renjian, a researcher at the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission’s Institute of Transporta­tion Research.

The network, which will connect all county-level administra­tive regions, borders, major facilities and tourism spots, will comprise roads, railways, air routes and waterways, according to the plan announced by the Ministry of Transport.

Apart from the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China’s plan of increasing the number of civil transport airports to about 400 in the coming years, the National Railway Administra­tion of China announced earlier this month that China will aim to build a 200,000km railway network by 2035, including 70,000 km of high-speed railways, up from about 38,000 km at present.

Major railway infrastruc­ture projects will be built to boost the developmen­t of China’s western region, such as the Sichuan-Tibet railway and a railway corridor connecting inland areas in southweste­rn and southern China, according to the administra­tion.

Amid global uncertaint­ies, including protection­ism and the COVID-19 pandemic, Xuzhou Constructi­on Machinery Group, a Jiangsu province-based constructi­on machinery manufactur­er, said it will aim to spur industrial chain developmen­t by exploiting opportunit­ies created by the nation’s dual-circulatio­n strategy, in order to ensure sustainabl­e growth in the long run.

“Although the overseas market remains challengin­g amid the pandemic, the sizable market scale of the domestic market is bringing huge opportunit­ies for Chinese constructi­on machinery producers,” said Wang Min, chairman of XCMG.

 ?? CHEN XIAODONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Employees work on the production line of drills at Zhangjiako­u Xuanhua Huatai Mining & Metallurgi­cal Machinery Co Ltd in Hebei province on Dec 19.
CHEN XIAODONG / FOR CHINA DAILY Employees work on the production line of drills at Zhangjiako­u Xuanhua Huatai Mining & Metallurgi­cal Machinery Co Ltd in Hebei province on Dec 19.

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