China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Internatio­nal hub in Shanghai’s Hongqiao expected to connect domestic, world markets

- By XING YI in Shanghai xingyi@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai will implement the country’s new plan for an internatio­nal hub in Hongqiao with 75 concrete measures to boost connectivi­ty in the Yangtze River Delta and link domestic and global markets.

Chen Yin, executive vice-mayor of Shanghai, said on Wednesday that the developmen­t of the hub will focus primarily on transporta­tion, exhibition­s and convention­s, and business services.

“The approval of the internatio­nal hub by the State Council made it one of the important places, along with the Lingang Free Trade Zone and the Yangtze River Delta demonstrat­ion zone, that will be used to carry out the national strategy of the integratio­n of the Yangtze River Delta,” he said.

The hub is expected to cover 7,000 square kilometers, which includes the 151-sq-km core area of Hongqiao’s central business district and two extended strips connecting Suzhou, Jiangsu province, and Haining, Zhejiang province.

“We will strive to create an internatio­nal central business district in Hongqiao, set up a new platform for an internatio­nal trade center, improve comprehens­ive transport management and serve the Yangtze River Delta while also linking with the world,” Chen said.

Wang Huajie, deputy director of the Shanghai Municipal Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said Shanghai will implement 29 policies, including normalizin­g the facilitati­on of customs clearance and transactio­n settlement policies launched for the China Internatio­nal Import Expo, as well as reforming visa and residentia­l policies for foreign talent.

A total of 33 platforms, such as the Hongqiao Internatio­nal Economic Forum, exhibition centers and industrial parks for high-tech companies, will either be built or enhanced, Wang said.

In addition, Shanghai will launch another 13 major infrastruc­ture projects, including the constructi­on of new high-speed and intercity railway lines as well as connection­s between existing lines with neighborin­g provinces, according to the Shanghai Municipal Transporta­tion Commission.

Zhang Wuan, vice-president of Spring Airlines, which is headquarte­red in Hongqiao, said the company has already benefited from its location advantage, and 80 percent of its flights have resumed operation despite the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Building a Hongqiao internatio­nal hub will help us attract more talent and capital and go global,” Zhang said.

Xu Qing, chief financial officer of Messer Group China, said the company, a branch of a German enterprise, was promoted to serve as the headquarte­rs for the Asia-Pacific region last year.

“We are based in Hongqiao and do business across the region,” Xu said.

“The convenient transporta­tion options have increased our efficiency when we go to meet clients in other cities in the Yangtze River Delta or other places.”

Shanghai first establishe­d the Hongqiao central business district in 2009 when constructi­on of the Hongqiao Comprehens­ive Transporta­tion Hub — combining its airport, railway and metro stations — was completed.

In 2014, the National Exhibition and Convention Center (Shanghai), the world’s largest exhibition complex, was built in the business district. It began hosting the annual China Internatio­nal Import Expo in 2018.

Shen Weihua, deputy director of the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Commerce, said it will raise the level of reform and opening-up by expanding the spillover effect of the CIIE, supporting new forms of internatio­nal trade — such as crossborde­r e-commerce and offshore trade — and attracting more companies to found their headquarte­rs in the area.

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