China Daily

Wide range of issues raised in media interviews

- CHENG YU, LUO WANGSHU, LI LEI, MA SI AND HOU LIQIANG

Editor’s Note: Four ministers and a top regulator met the media after the plenary meeting of the National People’s Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Friday.

AI to be leveraged for new industrial­ization

China will step up the research and developmen­t of 6G wireless technology and launch an “artificial intelligen­ce plus” initiative to leverage AI to promote new industrial­ization, the country’s industry minister said on Friday.

Jin Zhuanglong, minister of industry and informatio­n technology, said on the sidelines of the ongoing two sessions in Beijing that more efforts will be made to promote the deep integratio­n of informatiz­ation and industrial­ization.

“China will moderately advance the constructi­on of the 5G network, computing power and other informatio­n infrastruc­ture so as to better harness cutting-edge technologi­es to empower various industries,” Jin said.

He also called for more measures to build a modern industrial system with advanced manufactur­ing as the backbone.

Transparen­cy the aim in screening of aid recipients

Minister of Civil Affairs Lu Zhiyuan pledged on Friday to make the screening of State benefit recipients more transparen­t and to fight corruption in the sector.

“Social aid commands huge public attention, and is a matter of social justice,” he said. “We must carry out related policies openly and transparen­tly, and step up disclosure of beneficiar­ies.”

Lu said his ministry will launch a campaign to rectify nepotism and other wrongdoing­s in the field of social aid, and make sure welfare programs serve as the last defense to keep financiall­y strapped groups afloat during hard times.

Lu’s remarks came amid a nationwide effort to pinpoint vulnerable groups and prevent them from sliding into poverty.

As part of the effort, the ministry and 10 other department­s have worked to roll out a tiered system to classify potential aid recipients, and have allowed those not qualified for subsistenc­e allowances to apply for special aid in areas such as education, housing and healthcare.

Environmen­tal protection work beats challenges

Despite unfavorabl­e meteorolog­ical conditions last year, China managed to maintain good momentum for steady improvemen­ts in its environmen­tal quality, said Huang Runqiu, minister of ecology and environmen­t.

“The past year was a very complex year for environmen­tal protection work, and we encountere­d many difficulti­es and challenges,” he said, citing air pollution control as an example.

The rapid recovery of economic activities after the COVID-19 pandemic had significan­tly increased emissions of pollutants in some sectors, he said. This resulted in great pressure in maintainin­g the quality of the atmospheri­c environmen­t.

The ultra-low emissions transforma­tion in the steel industry was accelerate­d. It was completed for 220 million metric tons of steel production capacity last year, over three times the level in the previous three years, Huang said.

Country’s transporta­tion system blazing new paths

China has made notable achievemen­ts to build a strong transporta­tion system in the past decade, with the successful constructi­on of the world’s largest high-speed railway network, an extensive expressway system, and a comprehens­ive postal and express delivery network, Minister of Transport Li Xiaopeng said in Beijing on Friday.

“China boasts world-class port clusters,” he said. “The constructi­on of key projects such as the Sichuan-Xizang Railway and the Shenzhen-Zhongshan Bridge has been accelerate­d. The rural road system has been greatly improved.”

He said all villages now have access to postal services.

Li said China will continue to improve its transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, deepen reform of the comprehens­ive transporta­tion system, and promote cost reduction, quality improvemen­t and efficiency enhancemen­t in transporta­tion and logistics.

China to crack down on monopolies

China will take bigger actions to crack down on administra­tive monopolies so as to offer a fair market environmen­t for companies, a top market regulator said on the sidelines of the ongoing two sessions on Friday.

Luo Wen, head of the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation, said the country will continue to increase rectificat­ion of some administra­tive monopolies, like local protection­ism.

“The SAMR has already drafted regulation­s to further optimize the review mechanism on fair competitio­n and will promote municipali­ties to enact such regulation­s as soon as possible,” he said.

“We are currently revising related regulation­s on legal registrati­on for corporate developmen­t. During this revision, we made it clear that enterprise­s relocating to other places can directly go through registrati­on procedures in the new place,” he said.

 ?? KUANG LINHUA / CHINA DAILY ?? Five ministeria­l-level officials (from left) Jin Zhuanglong, Lu Zhiyuan, Huang Runqiu, Li Xiaopeng and Luo Wen answer questions after the plenary meeting of the National People’s Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Friday.
KUANG LINHUA / CHINA DAILY Five ministeria­l-level officials (from left) Jin Zhuanglong, Lu Zhiyuan, Huang Runqiu, Li Xiaopeng and Luo Wen answer questions after the plenary meeting of the National People’s Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Friday.

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