China Daily

Xinjiang to invest huge amount for highway network

- By MAO WEIHUA in Urumqi and CUI JIA in Beijing Contact the writer at cuijia@chinadaily.com.cn

The Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region will inject record funding into building new roads this year so it can better serve as China’s trade hub linking countries along the Silk Road Economic Belt.

New infrastruc­ture projects are also expected to bring more job opportunit­ies for locals, the region’s top economic planning official said.

This year, the northweste­rn region will invest 170 billion yuan ($24.8 billion) into new roads, up nearly six fold from 2016.

The region has never seen such investment in road constructi­on, Zhang Chunlin, director of the Xinjiang Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said in an exclusive interview in the regional capital of Urumqi.

The region will also invest 8.1 billion yuan in constructi­ng railways and 4.8 billion yuan in civil aviation projects, both up by 50 percent from last year. The investment in building roads, railways and airports this year will top the total funding for transporta­tion infrastruc­ture from 2011 to 2015.

Building a highway network in a region that takes up onesixth of China’s territory is a priority, Zhang said. Currently, about 40 percent of the cities and counties in Xinjiang are not connected by highways.

“Without the highways, oil, coal and agricultur­al products of Xinjiang cannot be shipped out of the region smoothly, and logistics costs will remain high,” Zhang said.

After the planned highway network is completed, logistics costs in the region can be reduced by 30 percent, he added. The region plans to start constructi­on this year on 6,096 kilometers of highways.

Although poor infrastruc­ture has been holding back developmen­t of the region, Xinjiang now sees opportunit­y for economic growth, he said.

Massive transporta­tion projects can use significan­t amounts of steel and concrete, which can help to stimulate economic growth. What’ s more, local scan fill the jobs created by those projects, he added.

Currently, there is one highway linking Xinjiang and other parts of China to the east. The roads now connecting the region and China’s neighbors to the west cannot meet the demands of future trade.

Zhang believes that without the support of transporta­tion, becoming the trade hub on the Silk Road Economic Belt is not feasible, so Xinjiang must face the challenge head-on.

The central government sees Xinjiang, which borders countries including Kazakhstan, Pakistan and Mongolia, as the key trade center on the economic belt.

The economic belt, part of the Belt and Road Initiative proposed by President Xi Jinping in 2013, aims to revive the ancient trade route.

Xinjiang also plans to begin research on a high-speed railway connecting Urumqi and Horgos, a land port on the China-Kazakhstan border. Additional­ly, Urumqi Internatio­nal Airport will be expanded to cope with surging domestic and internatio­nal traffic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong