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        China Daily Website

        Go-west project dusts itself off in arid plateau

        Updated: 2012-11-19 09:58
        By Gao Yuan in Lanzhou (China Daily)

        Businesses take a gamble on new industrial center in NW China

        It lies hidden in a bleak basin in Northwest China. Deep inside the Loess Plateau, famous for its sterile soil and strong winds, the place has no natural water resources and the per capita gross domestic product is well below the nation's average.

        Yet despite this grim outlook, it has become the focus of many local people's dreams. They foresee it being transformed into the local equivalent of Pudong in Shanghai.

        Go-west project dusts itself off in arid plateau

        Standing in a construction site, a billboard advertises a trunk road blueprint for the Lanzhou New Zone in Northwest China. As China is striving to boost domestic demand to save the economy from recession, the zone, a newly approved State-level economic development area, is being constructed to become what local investors say will be "a golden opportunity that no one wants to miss". [Photo/China Daily] 

        As China is striving to boost domestic demand to save the economy from recession, Lanzhou New Zone, a newly approved State-level economic development area, is being constructed to become what local investors say will be "a golden opportunity that no one wants to miss".

        On Aug 20, the State Council approved plans to establish the nation's fifth State-level development zone in Lanzhou, the capital city of Northwest China's Gansu province. Previous approvals include the Pudong New Zone in Shanghai and Binhai New Zone in Tianjin. Both of those projects got the nod from central government in the 1990s.

        Starting in 2010 Beijing speeded up its pace in approving State-level economic zones amid a national economic slowing down. It has endorsed four new zone projects since then, the latest being the Nansha New Zone in Guangzhou, which received approval on Sept 6, less than 20 days after Lanzhou New Zone received its State-level status.

        Analysts say the Lanzhou New Zone project is part of the central government's urbanization drive to prop up the economy for the comparatively less-developed western provinces of Gansu and Qinghai, as well as Ningxia Hui and Xinjiang Uygur autonomous regions.

        China has been trying to stimulate domestic consumption in a bid to boost the economy. The nation's GDP growth in the third quarter slowed to 7.4 percent after hitting a then three-year low of 7.6 percent in the second quarter, data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed.

         

        Related Readings

        Go-west project dusts itself off in arid plateau A glance at Lanzhou New Zone
        Go-west project dusts itself off in arid plateau A bumpy road ahead but a land of promise

         

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