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Two New Port Clusters to Be Built
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China's port and shipping facilities are to be upgraded to include two major new regions, the Ministry of Communications has announced.

 

A total of five port clusters, including the existing three surrounding Shanghai, Shenzhen and Tianjin, have been arrowed as priorities under a new port development plan.

 

The outline of the plan to revise Chinese port facilities was made by Communications Minister Li Shenglin.

 

The minister said the two additional port groups are located on the mainland side of the Taiwan Straits in southern Fujian; and in Hainan and southern Guangdong.

 

The plan is part of efforts to meet targets set out in the national social and economic development program (2006-2010), Li said.

 

Li said China's seaports and their relative easy access to containers and industrial materials were major contributors to the transformation of the nation's economy.

 

"Shanghai, Shenzhen and Tianjin have already been built into national ocean transportation hubs," he said.

 

Shanghai, located at the mouth of the Yangtze River, is the largest business city in China serving the versatile urban economic network across the Yangtze River Delta.

 

Shenzhen is becoming an increasingly important support center to Hong Kong, and is in itself leading many smaller ports on the Pearl River Delta, where China's largest group of exporting manufacturers are located.

 

Tianjin, close to Beijing and a key link of all the seaports around the Bohai Bay, is vital to the economy of northern China.

 

However, Li said the two newly planned port clusters would be of no less importance.

 

The southeastern port cluster would be built around its center of Xiamen, a business center of southern Fujian joined by Fuzhou, Quanzhou, Putian and Zhangzhou.

 

Zhangzhou will serve as a destination for China's import of crude oil and natural gas, and the others will be largely involved in container handling.

 

The Fujian port blueprint is part of the central government's scheme of the Western Shore Economic Zone of the Taiwan Straits.

 

It was designed to help develop economic ties between the Chinese mainland and Taiwan.

 

Li said the scheme takes into account "mainland-Taiwan free trade relations agreement" that, although little progress has been made to date, would benefit business communities on both sides of the Straits.

 

Zhang Changping, the mayor of Xiamen, a large port already serving cross-Straits trade, recently expressed the municipal government's will to boost its annual throughput from 70 million tons to 100 million tons.

 

In southwest China, Zhanjiang, Fangcheng and Haikou will form a system of container transportation. Zhanjiang, Haikou and other ports will also serve as places to download and store reserves of imported crude oil and natural gas. And Zhanjiang, Fangcheng and Basuo have been designed for the import mineral resources.

 

Passenger transport infrastructures will be improved in Zhanjiang, Haikou and Sanya over the next five years, according to the national program.

 

Li said the newly drafted port development plan was aimed at "expanding the transportation capacity of the Chinese coast to match the economy's fast growth".

 

He forecast that China's ocean cargo handling capacity will rise from 3.8 billion tons in 2005 to 5 billion tons in 2010, and its coastal throughput of containers, as measured in TEU (twenty-foot equivalent unit), will grow from 74.41 million in 2005 to 130 million in 2010.

 

Chai Haitao, a researcher with the International Trade Research Academy of the Ministry of Commerce, said the plan for the new round of port expansions had been undertaken because of the future economic development in China and the world.

 

Chai predicted that China's foreign trade would grow at an annual rate of 15 percent between now and 2010, so that almost all of China's major sea ports would undergo expansions in the next few years.

 

Meanwhile, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has predicted that the world's economy would grow at an annual rate of 4.2 percent during 2006-09, relatively higher than that during the 2001-05 period. And in the coming five years, China will continue to be the world's economic engine with annual growth of no less than eight percent.

 

China has been the world's biggest cargo producer since 2004, with Shanghai being the world's largest port in handling tonnage. 10 out of the world's 25 largest seaports are located in China.

 

Li announced the plans in a special interview with China Daily at a high-level forum on port cities held between April 18 and 20 in Tianjin.

 

(China Daily May 8, 2006)

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