China Daily Global Edition (USA)

New high-tech zones inject vitality to innovation efforts

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CHONGQING — Long and big-bellied Rongchang pigs have long provided ideal pork for a Chinese delicacy called Huiguorou, or stir-fried pork slices in spicy sauce, but now, the fame of the pig breed is transcendi­ng the catering and restaurant industry.

The Rongchang district is located in Chongqing municipali­ty, a sprawling metropolis in southwest China. Last month, a 17-square-kilometer area in the district was marked as a national high-tech industrial and developmen­t zone.

Earlier this month, the State Council approved a total of 12 new zones to be national hightech zones. Among them are Rongchang and Yongchuan in Chongqing, Chuxiong in Yunnan province, Gongqingch­eng and Fengcheng in Jiangxi province and Zhanjiang and Maoming in Guangdong.

The new addition brings the total number of such zones to 168, according to the Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology.

“Most of the zones are industrial ones, and Rongchang is the first agricultur­al high-tech zone nationwide,” said Cao Qingyao, Communist Party of China secretary of Rongchang district.

Rongchang has a strong pig breeding and trading tradition. There is a live pig e-trade market in the zone.

Pig farmers, agri-companies, supermarke­ts and dealers trade through the platform. Last year, more than 100 million live pigs were sold through the online market and total trade volume was 37 billion yuan (about $5.9 billion). Its live pig turnover was about a third of the national total.

“The live pig e-market gives us pricing power. We are also developing new technologi­es to bring changes to traditiona­l pig farming,” Cao said.

Now, 412 companies in the pharmaceut­ical, animal feed and stock-breeding machinery sectors have gathered in the zone.

“The status of national hightech zone is not only a name change for us. The administra­tive staff will have more power in land use, tax, fiscal policy, human resources and other areas of economic management,” Cao said.

It will also mean more policy support from the central government. For example, companies in the national high-tech zones can seek financing through the New Third Board, which serves small and medium-sized enterprise­s. Companies will also see more funding and national exposure, which could help them to be pioneers in certain industries.

Many of the existing zones have proven successful and companies in these zones have created more jobs for their local areas, experts said.

“The aim of creating these zones is quality growth. These high-tech zones could lead regional industrial upgrading and create fresh experience­s to be shared,” Cao said.

In applying for the national high-tech-zone status, local government has pushed the renovation of traditiona­l industries.

Dianzhong Nonferrous Co. in Chuxiong Yi Autonomous Prefecture of southwest China’s Yunnan province used to be an energy-guzzler and high polluting factory. Supported by national and regional funds, it developed technology to increase efficiency in recycling copper waste.

Last year, the revenue of the company reached 6.6 billion yuan, up 15 percent year-onyear.

“These high-tech zones will lead innovation and technologi­cal progress. It is hoped they will be new growth engines for regional economic integratio­n and upgrading,” said Peng Diyun, a professor at Nanchang University.

 ?? XINHUA ?? An employee checks the health data of a female Rongchang pig in Chongqing.
XINHUA An employee checks the health data of a female Rongchang pig in Chongqing.

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