China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Chinese builders wanted in the US

- By LILLIAN LIU for China Daily

Chinese infrastruc­ture techniques are urgently needed to rehabilita­te America’s poorly maintained and in some cases dilapidate­d bridges and road system, industry experts from both countries agree.

The fact that the US, the world’s most economical­ly and technologi­cally powerful country, should import fasttrain know-how from a developing China, reflects a new normal for China-US cooperatio­n and communicat­ion.

That notion was stressed at the 2017 US–China Transporta­tion Cooperatio­n Forum, held in San Francisco yesterday.

“China and the US cooperatio­n on the infrastruc­ture front is posed to become the new highlight in the trade engagement between the two countries,” Luo Linquan, China’s consul general to San Francisco, said in a keynote speech at the forum.

“California along with its neighborin­g states has especially close trade relations with China,” he added. “The import and export volume between this region and China has mounted to more than $201 billion in 2016.

“The One Belt, One Road Initiative was conceived in China but it provides a global platform for economic developmen­t for all the countries participat­ing,” he said.

Chad Edison, deputy secretary for transporta­tion at California’s state transporta­tion agency, said the transporta­tion system in the state, which he described as “not as efficient as it should be”, could be improved with Chinese builders, know-how and services.

Chinese infrastruc­ture companies expressed interest in getting involved in the improvemen­ts. Michael Lee, president of China Railway Signal & Communicat­ion Corp, said he hoped to build the group’s “second home” in the US.

“American infrastruc­ture may be outdated, but the country has very high industry standards. Those high standards help Chinese companies learn and grow,” Lee said at the forum, which had more than 200 Chinese and American government officials and infrastruc­ture company delegates participat­ing.

US president Donald Trump has announced a $1 trillion in new spending on roads, bridges and other constructi­on during the next decade.

The US civil engineerin­g associatio­n estimated the country would need to invest $3.6 trillion to build and upgrade infrastruc­tures nationwide by 2020. That would open opportunit­ies for cooperatio­n with foreign builders.

Experts at the forum concluded that the two government­s’ very different attitudes toward infrastruc­ture and how it would affect the economy have become an inevitable hurdle.

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