China Daily

Joint office to help guide Yangtze River Delta area

Administra­tive center will assist urban integratio­n, developmen­t

- Wang Ying contribute­d to this story. By ZHOU WENTING in Shanghai zhouwentin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

A joint administra­tive office for the Yangtze River Delta region will be establishe­d and a three-year plan regarding the integrated developmen­t of the region involving 26 cities will be formulated, a top Shanghai official said on Wednesday.

It signified that the integrated developmen­t of the region — Shanghai and most cities in neighborin­g Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Anhui provinces accounting for nearly 20 percent of China’s GDP and 10 percent of its population — will make substantia­l progress, and Shanghai will play a strategic role as a world-class core city, local political advisers said after listening to Li Qiang, secretary of the Shanghai Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China, at their annual gathering on Wednesday.

“We have reached a point when the regional cooperatio­n of the Yangtze River Delta region must be deepened comprehens­ively,” Li said.

“Globally, regional collaborat­ion represents a general trend in the developmen­t of the world economy. In China, city agglomerat­ion has become a central engine driving the country’s economic transforma­tion and developmen­t,” he said.

Li said coordinati­on and links in six areas — planning, reform, innovation, urban facilities, transporta­tion networks and public services — will be key to pushing forward the integratio­n of the region, which brings together the Belt and Road Initiative and the Yangtze River Economic Zone.

Tu Haiming, a member of the Shanghai People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, said as more urban agglomerat­ions emerge in the world, the Yangtze River Delta region must compete globally as a team as it strives to become a world center for modern service and advanced manufactur­ing industries and an important gateway in the Asia-Pacific region.

“As Shanghai is on its way to becoming a center of internatio­nal economy, finance, trade, shipping and technologi­cal innovation, regional integratio­n can begin in these fields,” said Tu, who is also president of Shanghai Hodoor Real Estate Developmen­t Company.

Wang Jucheng, a political adviser, suggested the research, developmen­t and manufactur­e of new energy vehicles could promote regional integratio­n.

“Both Shanghai and the three provinces have a good foundation in the automobile industry, and Shanghai has an absolute advantage in the country in technology breakthrou­ghs and mass production in this field,” said Wang.

Li Ruxin, another political adviser and director of the Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, suggested the large science facilities in Shanghai be shared by universiti­es and research institutes in the Yangtze River Delta region, which boasts 74 key State-level laboratori­es, to facilitate the production of more cutting-edge technologi­cal achievemen­ts.

“I encourage the establishe­d large science facilities, such as the Shanghai Synchrotro­n Radiation Facility and the National Center for Protein Science, to be shared by experts outside of Shanghai,” he said.

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