China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Global giants sign up for import expo

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

A new group of global heavyweigh­ts in high-end manufactur­ing, automobile­s and consumer goods have signed up for the China Internatio­nal Import Expo, as they seize opportunit­ies to thrive in a country that deepens its opening-up and prioritize­s quality growth.

Twenty-five foreign enterprise­s confirmed their attendance during a signing ceremony on Saturday, raising the curtain for China’s first import fair, which has thus far secured nearly 1,100 participat­ing merchants, according to the event’s organizers. New entrants include Fortune 500 companies like engineerin­g and aerospace conglomera­te Honeywell, semiconduc­tor giant Qualcomm, automaker Fiat Chrysler and consumer goods provider Unilever.

“The expo sends the clear signal of China’s opening-up, serves to satisfy people’s needs for a beautiful life, pushes ahead with supplyside structural reform and promotes consumptio­n upgrade,” said Zhong Xiaomin, deputy-director of the China Internatio­nal Import Expo Bureau.

The bureau has joined forces with more than 200 exhibition agencies from 165 countries to draw vendors worldwide to be part of the show. By the end of April, they confirmed and prospectiv­e participan­ts numbered 1,800, and the exhibition area exceeded 180,000 square meters, Zhong said.

Companies regard the expo as a springboar­d to showcasing some of their cutting-edge technologi­es and way to elbow their way into China.

“We will bring our agricultur­al lighting solutions and the latest Light Fidelity technology, in which LED lighting provides a broadband internet connection through light waves,” said Wang Yun, president of Philips Lighting Greater China.

German machine tool maker Trumpf will display 3D met “While al printing techniques and a suite of smart factory solutions to help Chinese companies maximize productivi­ty and climb up the value chain, said Alexander Hafla, research and developmen­t director of Trumpf China.

“The expo is a good chance not only to increase our brand awareness, but to show what new technologi­es we have and pass that on to our new customers,” he said.

Even for those with longstandi­ng presence in China, the show is a gravitatio­nal pull to link the expanding middleto high-income earners with a greater variety of products that weren’t previously available in China.

some 30 of our brands are well received in China, that number still stands in sharp contrast to the total 400 brands we own and operate worldwide,” said Zeng Xiwen, vice-president of Unilever North Asia.

“We will showcase more food and skin care products via the expo so that people in China stand to benefit from purchasing premium items at home,” he said.

A group of 47 buyer companies, composed of State-owned enterprise­s, joint ventures and local firms, engaged in preliminar­y talks on the sidelines of the signing ceremony to tap into potential clients.

“Between 3,000 to 4,000 Chinese furniture makers on our platform said they are prepared to sign contracts with overseas merchants during the expo,” said Zhu Jiagui, chief executive officer of Red Star Macalline Internatio­nal Trade, a subsidiary of China’s leading home furnishing retail chain, which harbors over 80,000 vendors.

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