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China 2.0: MEGA Cities, SMART Cities

Metro+Intercity HSR in Wuhan Megaregion

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Excellent, for mega-metropolis "Metro + HSR" is pivotal infra in land transport infra.

You belong to Yangtze Midstream Mega-metropolitan Region (长江中游城市群), three T1 cities as cores that are Wuhan, Changsha and Nanchang. Altogether 31 cities, covering an area of 317,000 sqm, population targeting 172 million. The plan was approved by PRC central government on 5th April 2015, now building fast as we speak, congrats to you guys!

Enjoy some snapshots of Nanchang:

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Every city can has its own big data centre for public affairs.


Yes each city will develop its own platform, and there are at least 193 cities doing that, market is huge for ICT companies! The article mentioned Yinchuan is working with ZTE am I right? Well there is another major competitor - Huawei. I believe ICT companies will compete for these big booming public budgets.

Huawei Connect 2016
http://www.huawei.com/minisite/huaweiconnect2016/en/smart-city/
(Video link)

ZTE iCity Solution

http://enterprise.zte.com.cn/en/banner_management/banners/201404/P020140419657180221402.pdf

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Yes each city will develop its own platform, and there are at least 193 cities doing that, market is huge for ICT companies! The article mentioned Yinchuan is working with ZTE am I right? Well there is another major competitor - Huawei. I believe ICT companies will compete for these big booming public budgets.

Huawei Connect 2016
http://www.huawei.com/minisite/huaweiconnect2016/en/smart-city/
(Video link)

ZTE iCity Solution

http://enterprise.zte.com.cn/en/banner_management/banners/201404/P020140419657180221402.pdf

View attachment 342612

Smart Tax App in Guizhou Province!

Big Data Expo 2016 in Guiyang City
Facial recognition payment
Facial recognition selfie-drone!

@grey boy 2 @TaiShang @Jguo @yusheng @terranMarine @powastick @Mista
 
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Hangzhou to build 'City Brain' with Alibaba and Foxconn
(People's Daily Online) 17:43, October 13, 2016

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Hangzhou Mayor Zhang Hongming, chairman of Alibaba's Technology Steering Committee Wang Jian, and founder and CEO of Foxconn Technology Group Terry Gou jointly launch the Hangzhou City Brain project at the 2016 Computing Conference in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province on Oct. 13. (Photo/Alibaba Group)

The Hangzhou government launched a new project, titled "City Brain," with Alibaba Group and Foxconn Technology Group at the 2016 Computing Conference in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province on Oct. 13.

City Brain, an artificial intelligence hub, will use big data to help the city "think" and make decisions. It aims to build Hangzhou into a smart city with the ability to self-regulate and even interact with human beings.

"The core of City Brain will use the ET artificial intelligence technology of Ali cloud, which can conduct overall real-time analysis of the city, automatically deploy public resources and amend defects in urban operations," said Wang Jian, chairman of Alibaba's Technology Steering Committee.

The first step of the City Brain project is to collect data relating to infrastructure facilities including transportation, resources and water supply. From there, the partners will integrate data resources scattered around the city to navigate its "neural network."
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Wang Jian, chairman of the Technology Steering Committee of Alibaba Group, introduces the City Brain project at the 2016 Computing Conference in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province on Oct. 13. (Photo/Alibaba Group)

According to Hua Xiansheng, a machine vision scientist at Ali Cloud, City Brain will be the only artificial intelligence system in the world that can achieve real-time analysis of city-wide videos. The transportation module has already been in use since September on Hangzhou's Shixin Road. Test data shows that, through the intelligent regulation of traffic lights, traffic flow on the street has improved 3 to 5 percent on average, and even up to 11 percent on some sections of the road.

"It's just the beginning," said Wang. "City Brain is an unprecedented … experiment of bringing artificial intelligence into city management."

The computing conference, held jointly by Hangzhou city government and Alibaba Group, is the largest domestic summit on cloud computing and big data. Its former name was Ali Cloud Developers Conference.
http://en.people.cn/n3/2016/1013/c90000-9126738.html
 
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Sorry Hangzhou.
The capital city of China's poorest province Guizhou seems to have started earlier, also backed by Alibaba, Tencent, Foxconn, etc...
And they provide high-speed wifi EVERYWHERE in the city.


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China’s Overbearing Share of Smart Meter Connections Portends Future Issues for Its IoT Competitiveness
Posted byIoT.Business.News
Date:October 19, 2016
in:Market,Smart Cities & Homes

Smart Meter Connectionsto Dwarf All OtherChina IoT Marketsat 63% Connection Share.

Smart meters are China’s largest IoT application segment thanks to China’s massive investments in its utility infrastructure.
ABI Research finds that more than45% of China’s IoT connections today stem from smart meters. When measured by cellular and fixed line connections, more than 63% are smart meters, with that percentage expected to climb over the next five years. The net result may mean lopsidedinvestments in IoTthat eventually undercut China’s competitiveness in the global market.

China’s meter, module, and gateway vendors—including Holley Metering, Kaifa Technology, and Wasion Group for electricity, gas, and water meters, as well as Neoway, SIMCom, and ZTE for cellular modules— will benefit from local utilities sourcing from local Chinese OEMs. ABI Research also expectsproprietary LPWA technologiesto play a role, with LoRa to be the likely winner; though, this is highly dependent on how other vendors position themselves to appeal to Chinese markets. But there is a downside to such market dominance, which is the region’s lack of investment in two criticalIoT services markets.

“Concentrated IoT investment may mean other application segments do not get the attention deserved, particularly in advanced analytics and professional services,”says Dan Shey, Managing Director and Vice President at ABI Research.“If China’s goal is to modernize industries, IoT is a strategic technology sector, but it dictates investments in the specificIoT application marketsserving those industries.”

Advanced analytics and professional services both require a vibrant, competitive market. Investment in advanced analytics needs to be broad-based, because each connected machine and object is unique in the data that defines its attributes and operation. Professional services, meanwhile, command a broad range of applications/development, systems integration, solutions/hardware design services, and strategic consulting services. A healthy supply of system integrators and value-added resellers providing professional services is critical for filling in the IoT solution gaps. In both service segments, if theIoT opportunityis far smaller in the non-smart meter segments, lack of competition will limit innovation and solution quality.

“The bright side could be more opportunities for non-Chinese firms to fill in for lack of local suppliers and skill sets,”concludes Shey.

“The growing population in China’s urban centers means opportunities for smart city services integration beyond metering markets, particularly in autonomous driving. China’s aging population also portends growth in smart home, patient monitoring, and aging-in-place services. But all of these opportunities are at the mercy of China’s fragmented regulatory environment, which already hinders market access to foreign fleet telematics and smart meter vendors.”

These findings are fromABI Research’s IoT Market Tracker – Worldwide.
http://iotbusinessnews.com/2016/10/...s-portends-future-issues-iot-competitiveness/
 
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China’s Overbearing Share of Smart Meter Connections Portends Future Issues for Its IoT Competitiveness
Posted byIoT.Business.News
Date:October 19, 2016
in:Market,Smart Cities & Homes

Smart Meter Connectionsto Dwarf All OtherChina IoT Marketsat 63% Connection Share.

Smart meters are China’s largest IoT application segment thanks to China’s massive investments in its utility infrastructure.
ABI Research finds that more than45% of China’s IoT connections today stem from smart meters. When measured by cellular and fixed line connections, more than 63% are smart meters, with that percentage expected to climb over the next five years. The net result may mean lopsidedinvestments in IoTthat eventually undercut China’s competitiveness in the global market.

China’s meter, module, and gateway vendors—including Holley Metering, Kaifa Technology, and Wasion Group for electricity, gas, and water meters, as well as Neoway, SIMCom, and ZTE for cellular modules— will benefit from local utilities sourcing from local Chinese OEMs. ABI Research also expectsproprietary LPWA technologiesto play a role, with LoRa to be the likely winner; though, this is highly dependent on how other vendors position themselves to appeal to Chinese markets. But there is a downside to such market dominance, which is the region’s lack of investment in two criticalIoT services markets.

“Concentrated IoT investment may mean other application segments do not get the attention deserved, particularly in advanced analytics and professional services,”says Dan Shey, Managing Director and Vice President at ABI Research.“If China’s goal is to modernize industries, IoT is a strategic technology sector, but it dictates investments in the specificIoT application marketsserving those industries.”

Advanced analytics and professional services both require a vibrant, competitive market. Investment in advanced analytics needs to be broad-based, because each connected machine and object is unique in the data that defines its attributes and operation. Professional services, meanwhile, command a broad range of applications/development, systems integration, solutions/hardware design services, and strategic consulting services. A healthy supply of system integrators and value-added resellers providing professional services is critical for filling in the IoT solution gaps. In both service segments, if theIoT opportunityis far smaller in the non-smart meter segments, lack of competition will limit innovation and solution quality.

“The bright side could be more opportunities for non-Chinese firms to fill in for lack of local suppliers and skill sets,”concludes Shey.

“The growing population in China’s urban centers means opportunities for smart city services integration beyond metering markets, particularly in autonomous driving. China’s aging population also portends growth in smart home, patient monitoring, and aging-in-place services. But all of these opportunities are at the mercy of China’s fragmented regulatory environment, which already hinders market access to foreign fleet telematics and smart meter vendors.”

These findings are fromABI Research’s IoT Market Tracker – Worldwide.
http://iotbusinessnews.com/2016/10/...s-portends-future-issues-iot-competitiveness/


Yes, China already topped the world in smart grid stimulus investment since some years ago.

smart grid.png


In 2013, global spending on grid modernization was nearly $15 billion, in which China tops the world and spent $4.3 billion (29% share of global) on smart grid investments, while the U.S. spent $3.6 billion (24% share of the world), according to new figures from Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF). China is anticipated to spend more than any other country on smart grid developments for several years at least. As China establishes standards, seeks equipment, and develops its own technologies, it will play a central role in setting the tone of smart grid development worldwide, through the sheer size of its smart grid activities.

As a national priority, with completion planned for 2020, the State Grid Corporation of China (SGCC), which controls electricity distribution, announced that construction will begin on major nationwide grid upgrades in 2011. Cost of the projects is estimated to be $100 billion through 2020. The SGCC, the largest single electric power entity in China, has a multi-stage 10-year plan for the deployment of smart grid.

The initial phase of the plan calls for pilot programs and planning initiatives through 2010.
  • Set technical and management standard
  • Develop technology and equipment
  • Set development plans and initiate pilot projects
  • Specifically, in 2010, China started construction on the "Two Vertical, Two Horizontal" plan and reach interregional transmission capability of 12.9 GW by the end of the year.
The second phase, undertaken concurrently, consists of development of standards through 2014 and construction projects beginning in 2011 and running through 2015.
  • Construct UHV grid and urban-rural distribution grid
  • Construct smart grid operation/control and interactive service system
  • Key technological breakthroughs and their applications
  • By 2015, UHV and other intra-regional transmission capacity will be 240 GW. Distribution and power provision will reach a reliability rate of 99.915% or higher in the cities and 99.73% or higher in rural areas. Smart meters will be in widespread use and EV charging stations will have been deployed in numbers that will satisfy demand
The final phase of the plan focuses on system upgrades that will begin in 2016 and culminate in 2020
  • Complete a strong, smart grid
  • Become world leaders in management, technology and equipment
  • By 2020, UHV and other intra-regional transmission capacity will reach 400 GW, enough to connect all planned coal, hydro, nuclear and wind power to areas with high demand
101001b01-jpg.214706


Key Projects / Programs
  • Smart Community Demonstration Project: The project, consisting of 655 households and 11 buildings, is the first demonstration community built by North China Power Grid as well as the first project constructed under SGCC's guideline on smart communities. The project is located at the Xin'ao Golf Garden residential complex in Langfang, Heibei province, and was completed in September 2010. The project includes a low-voltage electricity network, power usage information collection, an interactive service platform, smart household installment, electric automobile charging facilities, distributed power generation and energy storage, automatic electricity distribution, integrated network using low-voltage fiber optic cables, and AMI meters for electricity, gas and water.
  • National Wind Power Integration Research and Test Center of China: The project centers on the development of renewable energy and clean energy storage. Toward that goal, the SGCC is installing 30 wind turbines with at least 78 MW of generating capacity, 640 kW of solar photovoltaic (PV) capacity, and 2.5 MW of energy storage. Prudent Energy is providing vanadium redox batteries. When it is completed, the testing center will be the largest facility of its kind in t
  • Power System Digital Real-Time Simulation Device: This research project developed the first large-scale power system real-time simulation device. The device can simulate a power system with up to 1,000 generators and 10,000 bus bars. The development of this device will contribute to the safe operation of the power grid by researching the access of new large-scale equipment and enhancing power system incident analysis. The device will also allow equipment tests such as the safe and stable operation and control of a large AC/DC hybrid transmission system.
  • 1000-kV Jindongnan Nanyang-Jingmen Ultra High Voltage (UHV) AC Pilot Project: Construction of a single circuit line of 640 kilometers, with a capacity of 6,000 MVA, and an operational voltage of 1,100 kV.
  • Xiangjiaba-Shanghai +/- 800-kV UHV DC Transmission Pilot Project: Construction of an advanced UHV DC high capacity, long distance, DC transmission line.
  • Ningdong-Shandong +/- 660-kV DC Project: Approved in November 2010 as a key project in the development of the West to East transmission project designed to move both hydro and thermal power from generation sites in the West to demand centers in the East.
  • Qinghai-Tibet 750-kV/+/-400-kV AC/DC Grid Interconnection Project: Construction of a 750-kV AC project and a +/-400- kV DC power transmission project from Qinghai to Tibet, allowing the integration for the first time of all provinces in SGCC’s service area. The project is expected to be put into operation by the end of 2011 or in 2012.
  • Advanced metering infrastructure, often referred to as smart meters, are still driving investment in next-generation grid technologies, but other categories of spending will dominate in the future. According to a report by In-Stat, China is currently on track to deploy 280 million smart meters by 2016, making China the largest smart meter installer in the world.
  • SGCC plans to implement 11 different types of smart grid projects, including building smart substations, installing 50 million smart meters, accommodating the integration of 20 GW of wind power, increasing electric vehicle recharging facilities by 7-fold, formulating 88 standards on smart grid, and completing construction of the integrated smart grid demonstration project in Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-City. The Eco-City, which is being developed in partnership with Singapore as an environmentally friendly city, is located east of Tianjin’s city center.
  • Fujian Electric Power Company’s 15.77 billion Yuan ($2.47 billion) investment in smart grid projects in the inland areas of Fujian province. In addition to 35 110-kV substations, the investment will include 9 electric vehicle battery replacement stations, 9 battery distribution stations, and 1,070 AC charging poles.

Source: https://defence.pk/threads/“dear-pr...ur-country-”-aiib.369354/page-4#ixzz4NqdrQzRs
 
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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-infrastructure-idUSKBN13N050
BUSINESS NEWS|Sun Nov 27, 2016 | 9:18pm EST
China approves 247 billion yuan railway plan for Jing-Jin-Ji megacity

China has approved a 247 billion yuan railway plan to improve transport links between the capital Beijing, the port city of Tianjin, and the neighboring province of Hebei, part of plans to integrate the three areas into a mega-city.

The National Development and Reform Commission said in a online statement on Monday that the plan will span nine projects that total 1,100 kms (683 miles) long. The projects will be built over the years up to 2030, it said.

The current population of the three areas is estimated at around 110 million, and by the time it's complete, the so-called Jing-Jin-Ji project will span 212,000 square kilometres (82,000 square miles), or more than twice the size of South Korea.
 
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World-class airport cluster to be built in Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei
2016-12-16 13:58 | chinadaily.com.cn | Editor: Feng Shuang

A world-class airport cluster will be established in Beijing and its two neighboring areas - Tianjin municipality and Hebei province, promoting regional integrated development, China Securities Journal reported.

A guideline, which aims to push forward coordinated development of civil aviation in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei area (or Jing-Jin-Ji in their abbreviations), was approved at a meeting presided by Feng Zhenglin, head of the Civil Aviation Administration, on Monday.

Airspace integration and comprehensive transportation connectivity will be basically achieved in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region by 2030, building a more powerful policy guarantee system, the guideline said.

A total of 23 tasks were put forward to build a world-class airport cluster and aviation hub, serving the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei city cluster, according to the guideline.

In order to achieve this goal, the guideline also set up two timelines: structural adjustment period (2016-2019) and all-round upgrade period (2020-2030).

Beijing's two existing airports have reached their maximum handling capacities and so the capital city is building its third civil airport - the Daxing International Airport - which will be the second-largest airport in the city, following the Beijing Capital International Airport.

The facility, located adjacent to Daxing district in Beijing and Langfang in the neighboring Hebei province, will involve 79.98 billion yuan ($13.11 billion) of investment and take about five years to complete, according to the National Development and Reform Commission.

The airport is designed to handle 72 million passengers, 2 million tons of cargo, and 620,000 planes in 2025.

Meanwhile, Tianjin Binhai International Airport and Shijiazhuang Zhengding International Airport have already taken measures to diversify their services and facilitate journeys.

China unveiled coordinated development plans for Beijing and its two neighboring areas - Tianjin municipality and Hebei province - in 2015. Under the plans, China will build Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei into an international city cluster and "create a new growth engine" by boosting technological innovation in the area.

Xinhua contributed to this story.


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Simple, mega-regions need mega airport cluster.
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Beijing's progress in curbing pollution in 2016

36b65e764f7a4ca0b75996bda24e47ae.jpg



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Good job by the Beijing government.
Still work to do.
Beijing's subway is now 574 km. Wow!
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Beijing to invest US$4.85B in Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei development
(China.org.cn) 10:13, February 04, 2017

Beijing will invest 33.31 billion yuan (US$4.85 billion) this year in Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei coordinated development, according to the municipal finance bureau.

2017 will see the city rein in administrative operation funds while focusing on major missions planned to promote Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei integrated development.

FOREIGN201702041022000162676124654.jpeg

JingJinJi mega region

The main expenditure policies incorporate efforts to guarantee the package policies made for "Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei Joint Development Plan", speed up sub-center construction, increase support for Hebei Province, and give partner assistance to Xinjiang and Tibet, according to Han Jie, spokesman and deputy director of the bureau.

Details of the investment tell that 11.09 billion yuan will fund the new airport construction in an effort to boost the transport network in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region.

A total of 11.81 billion yuan will be allocated to ensure trial operation of the new Tiantan Hospital and advance project II in Yizhuang branch of Tongren Hospital as well as new campus construction of Beijing Film Academy, Beijing Technology and Business University, etc.

Moreover, 4.25 billion yuan will be used for facilities establishment in administrative areas in the city’s sub-center, and for upgrading of the green landscape along inner ring roads.

Beijing will use 5.7 billion yuan to assist oriented areas including Xinjiang, Tibet, Qinghai, Inner Mongolia and Badong, support Hebei and advance collaboration work of the South-to-North Water Diversion project.

Another 470 million yuan will be put into ecological forests construction.
 
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Beijing’s Zhongguancun firms set up 2,709 branch companies in Tianjin and Hebei
China.org.cn, February 11, 2017

High-tech businesses located in Beijing’s Zhongguancun, or China’s Silicon Valley, had set up a total of 2,709 branch companies in neighboring Tianjin and Hebei Province as of 2016, a signal that the two municipalities and one province are forging ahead in a coordinated development of technology and innovation.

In a recent interview, Beijing mayor Cai Qi emphasized the need to activate the unique comparative advantages of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei to promote coordinated development in the region.

As of December 2016, businesses located in Beijing’s Zhongguancun had set up a total of 2,709 branch companies and 3,140 affiliates in Tianjin and Hebei. The technology contracts that Beijing delivered to Tianjin and Hebei reached 15.47 billion yuan (US$2.26 billion) in 2016, an increase of 38.7 percent.
 
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Commuting offers alternative option for megacity workers
(China Daily) 11:04, February 14, 2017

Becoming a trans-city commuter has become a solution for many young professionals who work in major cities as a way to balance their quality of life and the housing budget, a situation that benefits the overall housing market, said analysts.

Lu Haitao is one of those commuting between Shanghai and Suzhou.

Rental of his 52-square-meter apartment in an industrial park in Suzhou is just 3,000 yuan ($435) per month.
"There is a nice supermarket and a mall nearby. The apartment is nice, clean and tidy. In Shanghai, the rental for a similar apartment could be more than 7,000 yuan. If you live in a 3,000-yuan-rental apartment in Shanghai, the apartment could be as small as 15 sq m, or located in a dull suburban area," he said.

A half-hour train ride and a 20-minute subway trip send Lu from his apartment in Suzhou to his workplace in Shanghai, and at weekends, he spends all of his time in Suzhou.

"I am even thinking of buying an apartment in Suzhou, as the average price in the city center is about one-third of that in Shanghai," he said.

Luo Liqin, a real estate agent with Suzhou Aifang Real Estate Services, said trans-city commuters attach more importance to location than any other factor.

"Trans-city commuters favor properties within 5 kilometers of a railway station, and a supermarket in the neighborhood is a plus," he said.

Young professionals living in Suzhou while working in Shanghai, or living in Hebei province or Tianjin while working in Beijing are widely seen, thanks to the development of transportation infrastructure.

Smaller apartments and serviced apartments near transportation hubs add to residents' options, giving them more choices when the housing supplies are limited in key cities while satellite cities provide a livable environment, said Kenneth Rhee, CEO of Huhan Business Advisory (Shanghai).

"Cities with good resources in education, healthcare, entertainment and transportation infrastructures are likely to be chosen by trans-city commuters as the place to live," said Rhee.
 
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China to launch air quality inspection
2017-02-14 21:29:13 Xinhua Web Editor: Ding Xiaoxiao

A new round of air quality inspections will run in China from Feb. 15 to March 15, the Ministry of Environmental Protection said Tuesday.

Eighteen groups consisting of over 260 inspectors will be dispatched to 18 cities in north China including Beijing, Tianjin and Taiyuan, according to the ministry.

China has attached great importance to environmental protection in recent years as environmental degradation threatens people's health and undermines the country's long-term growth.

In inspections last year, the ministry said 720 people were detained and 6,454 held accountable for environment-related offences.

Moreover, last year, 4.05 million high-emission vehicles were taken off the country's roads.

Partly due to such efforts, Chinese cities reported less PM2.5 pollution in 2016, with the average density of PM2.5 in 338 cities falling by 6 percent.

China is aiming for a 10 percent reduction in air emissions from 2012 levels by 2017 in cities at the prefecture level and above. Meanwhile, the PM 2.5 density in Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei Province should drop 25 percent.


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How many other governments are checking air quality in their cities?
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Capital area to be economic dynamo
By LIU WEIFENG,WANG YU,,OUYANG SHIJIA | China Daily | Updated: 2017-02-20

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Integrated Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei creating global city cluster


The integrated and synergetic development of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei province— a national strategy preparing the way for the country's next growth engine — is expected to create a global city cluster and fuel the growth of the whole Bohai Bay area in the coming decades, according to China's top economic planner.

"The significance of the Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei synergetic development and integration strategy lies in the fact that it is not only enhancing the growth efficiency and effectiveness of related cities, but also driving the capital region into becoming a world-class city cluster and further boosting the entire Bohai Bay area of North China," Xu Shaoshi, head of the National Development and Reform Commission, said in an interview with China Daily on Sunday.

The Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei area has higher population density in major cities than the Yangtze River Delta and has to rely on a new growth pattern that strikes a balance between space restraints, economic growth and cooperative, synergetic development, Xu said.

Initiated in 2014 by President Xi Jinping, the national strategy of synergizing the development of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei stemmed from the long-held goal of ensuring balanced and integrated joint development of the area.

Three years later, substantial progress has been made and more innovation-driven projects and industry upgrades are in the pipeline.

This year, the region will witness a dozen integrated projects put into place outside Beijing, and part of the Beijing municipal government moving into an administrative subcenter on the outskirts of the city.

These projects include the new Beijing Daxing International Airport, the second phase of the Shougang Jingtang steel complex at Caofeidian, and several high quality environmental-protection and traffic projects.

The Tianjin Pilot Free Trade Zone and Beijing Zhongguancun Science Park also will play a more proactive role, encouraging cross-border investment and financing, equity transactions and entrepreneurship within the region by unifying rules and regulations, according to Xu.

Taking advantage of the free trade zone and port facilities, Tianjin is coming up with innovative ways to help enterprises from Beijing and Hebei go overseas, said Shen Lei, an official with Tianjin Dongjiang Free Trade Port Zone.

As part of the capital's regional integration strategy, Beijing is tasked with aiding Tianjin and Hebei in upgrading their manufacturing capacity and enhancing their innovation capabilities.

"Thanks to abundant talent and research and development advantages, Beijing will fuel joint development of the whole region. We encourage companies to invest in Hebei and Tianjin, generating jobs and benefiting local residents," Beijing Mayor Cai Qi said.

In 2016, Beijing's investment in Tianjin and Hebei skyrocketed. Enterprises from Beijing invested 114 billion yuan ($16.6 billion) in Hebei and almost 90 billion yuan in Tianjin, up 100 and 26 percent year-on-year. High-tech oriented investment from Beijing to Hebei and Tianjin hit 15.4 billion yuan in 2016, up 38.7 percent year-on-year.

The Cangzhou Hyundai plant in Hebei province, the fourth factory of Beijing Hyundai Motor and its first outside Beijing, is the largest integrated industrial project in the region, with a total investment of 7.4 billion yuan.

The factory opened in October, directly creating more than 3,000 local jobs. Lang Jiawei, deputy general manager of Beijing Hyundai, said the Cangzhou plant will spur a huge auto industrial chain valued at 100 billion yuan in Hebei.

As it helps neighboring regions, Beijing also is fine-tuning its economic structure and seeking a transformation from manufacturing powerhouse to a hub for more high-end cultural, financial and service industries, according to Wang Haichen, an official with the Beijing Development and Reform Commission.

Wang says the integration strategy is a wise move to seek balanced improvement in the business environment among different regions, and as a result, to attract more foreign direct investment.

Zhou Mi, a senior research fellow at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, agreed. "With the improved business environment and mechanism, the three regions as a whole will attract more resources."

Newly released statistics show that the aggregate GDP of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei accounted for more than 10 percent of the country's total in 2016, reaching 7.46 trillion yuan.

China is seeking more coordinated and balanced growth, and many regional stimulus strategies have been unveiled in recent years.

The Yangtze River Delta, with Shanghai as its primary engine, tops China's regional development powerhouses, with GDP reaching 17.9 trillion yuan, 24 percent of the national total last year.

But under its new strategy, the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei area is expected to catch up and grow into a world-class city cluster with robust economic power, said Cao Heping, an economist at Peking University.

Contact the writers at wangyu@chinadaily.com.cn

@AndrewJin , @ahojunk , @Nan Yang , @oprih

I guess there was a thread dedicated on the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei city cluster. But I could not locate it. @ahojunk may move this post to the concentrated thread, if possible.
 
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