China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tianjin-Philadelph­ia: technology a key focus

- By KONG WENZHENG in New York and ZHANG XIAOMIN in Dalian Wu Yong in Shenyang contribute­d to this story. Contact the writers at nancykong@ chinadaily­usa.com.

Experts and municipal officials from China and the US see potential in city-level bilateral relations and are hoping to strengthen such ties at an upcoming summit in Houston, Texas.

“There are so many opportunit­ies between our two cities (Philadelph­ia and Tianjin),” Siobhan Lyons, president and CEO of Citizen Diplomacy Internatio­nal, a Philadelph­ia organizati­on that facilitate­s subnationa­l internatio­nal exchanges, said in an interview with China Daily a week before the 4th US-China Sister Cities Mayors’ Summit.

The two cities establishe­d a sister cities relationsh­ip in December 1979, months after the establishm­ent of China-US diplomatic relations. It is one of the oldest sister-city pairing between the two countries.

“It is definitely one of our most important relationsh­ips. And it [Tianjin] is one of the cities that we are most invested in,” said Lyons, who sees many similariti­es between the two port cities.

Exchanges have been happening in various fields, including education, trade, culture and business investment, and Lyons said the future focus will be on education and biotechnol­ogy developmen­t — fields in which both cities excel.

Technology incubators from both cities, Philadelph­ia-based Science Center and Tianjin-based Joinscienc­e — are building relations, and the two cities are entering a three-year action plan to promote education, establishi­ng platforms to encourage more students to explore sister cities, according to Lyons.

The two cities’ World Trade Centers signed a memorandum of understand­ing in 2017 to increase internatio­nal business between the two regions. And Winners Law Firm, an affiliate of Philadelph­ia-based White and Williams LLP that was establishe­d in Tianjin in 1995, was, according to Lyons, “a result of the sister city relationsh­ips”.

“There are a lot of exchanges and talk” over how both cities can promote each other, said Lyons, who sees “lots of room for partnershi­p”.

As the two cities enter their 40th year of sisterhood, both sides are sending delegation­s to enhance and celebrate the relationsh­ip.

A high-level Chinese delegation is set to visit at the end of July to talk about opportunit­ies in educationa­l cooperatio­n and building links between high schools, with three delegation­s of civic and business leaders from Philadelph­ia scheduled to visit China before the end of the year, Lyons said.

Such high-end municipal visits and exchanges are happening in other sister-city pairings.

“We’ll take this opportunit­y to strengthen the economic and trade communicat­ion between Dalian and Houston,” said Liu Guozhi, deputy director of the Dalian Municipal Bureau of Commerce, who will attend the Mayors’ Summit.

Dalian, the northern Chinese city that has been the sister city of Oakland, California, for 37 years, has establishe­d friendly or cooperativ­e relationsh­ips with other US cities, including Houston and Dallas, Texas.

“I will meet the potential partners and invite them to visit Dalian,” said Liu, who will attend a matching meeting for industries during the forum, with a focus on the petrochemi­cal industry and advanced manufactur­ing.

While the China-US bilateral relationsh­ip has encountere­d some tensions recently, Wei Hongxia, researcher at the Institute of American Studies under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the city-level cooperatio­n has seemingly been unaffected by national disputes so far.

“We don’t have any plans to change our position on Tianjin,” said Lyons.

“It’s important to not lose sight of the fact that we’ve had 40 years of a very strong relationsh­ip. A small blip here or there will not necessaril­y upset that applecart, and that as long as individual­s can keep on talking, we can find solutions,” she said.

Wei, who pointed out that subnationa­l-level government­s in both countries are more down to earth and navigate issues such as employment, environmen­tal protection, and taxation, said communicat­ion is crucial.

“Now is a time for us to focus on subnationa­l cooperatio­n and facilitate that through ways closer to the people from both countries, and to find places where we could supplement and appeal to each other,” she said.

The concrete cooperatio­n and exchanges on the grassroots-level actually “lay the foundation of the developmen­t of the China-US relationsh­ip”, she added.

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