China Daily

Sinomach sets up new zone in Belarus park

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China National Machinery Industry Corp, the country’s largest machinery maker by production capacity, started work on a new industrial zone within the China-Belarus Industrial Park — one of China’s largest outbound investment projects — on Tuesday, a further testimony to the enhanced bilateral cooperatio­n under the Belt and Road Initiative.

The centrally-administra­ted State-owned enterprise, known as Sinomach, will establish a research and developmen­t facility to help more domestic firms participat­e in technology collaborat­ion with partners in Belarus, and transfer scientific research achievemen­ts into products and industrial solutions.

Zhang Xiaolun, chairman of Sinomach, said in the next step, the company’s new zone and the China-Belarus Industrial Park will be oriented toward industrial­ization, globalizat­ion, digitizati­on and ecology, as well as focus on boosting innovation and high-end manufactur­ing to improve and upgrade the Belarus economy.

Zhang said the park’s first phase, spreading over an area of 8.5 square kilometers which was completed on Tuesday, has an operationa­l area formed by 32 kilometers of roads, power, water and gas supply facilities, sewage sorting system and telecommun­ication networks. It can host over 100 companies.

The park hopes to attract more companies from sectors like electronic­s and communicat­ions, pharmaceut­icals, chemicals, biotechnol­ogy, machinery manufactur­ing, new materials, integrated logistics, e-commerce, big data storage and processing from all over the world to garner more high-quality foreign investment.

“At the crossroads of an important trade route linking the Baltic Sea with the Black Sea, and Russia to the European Union, the China Belarus Industrial Park will continue to serve as an important innovation, manufactur­ing, logistics, technology services and innovation hub for the growth of the BRI,” said Feng Hao, a researcher at the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission’s Institute of Comprehens­ive Transporta­tion.

Located 40 kilometers from the Belarusian capital of Minsk, and with the Moscow-Berlin highway and the capital’s airport easily accessible, the industrial park will further benefit from its convenient transporta­tion links, Feng said.

Despite the temporary difficulti­es posed by the COVID-19 outbreak, Belarus-China cooperatio­n in all areas will continue to develop, said Alexander Yaroshenko, head of the administra­tion of the China-Belarus Industrial Park.

Noting that Belarus and China are strategic partners, Yaroshenko said bilateral relations based on trust and mutual benefit show that the two countries are ready to help and support each other at this difficult time.

On May 12, 2015, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko and Chinese President Xi Jinping visited the future site of the industrial park, the largest cooperatio­n project between the two countries, Yaroshenko recalled.

Since then, the park has brought together 60 companies from 15 countries, including the United States, Austria, Lithuania, Germany, Switzerlan­d and Russia. Wellknown Chinese groups such as Huawei Technologi­es Co, ZTE Corp, China Merchants Group and Zoomlion Heavy Industry Science and Technology Co have entered the park, he said, adding the volume of declared investment­s has now reached $1.2 billion.

The park’s administra­tion will develop the park together with its Chinese partners and participan­ts from other countries, especially in priority areas such as pharmaceut­icals, said Yaroshenko, stressing China has rich experience in the treatment and prevention of various diseases.

“China’s fast-growing digital and 5G technologi­es will also provide a solid foundation for its manufactur­ers going forward. This will benefit greener, more efficient and sustainabl­e industrial developmen­t in the park,” said Ma Yu, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n in Beijing.

Belarus is an important member of the Eurasian Economic Union, connecting the Eurasian economy with the European Union. This gives companies residing in the park the Eurasian Economic Union Customs Code’s maximum possible volume of customs advantages and simplifica­tions in the areas of logistics and manufactur­ing, he said.

 ?? XINHUA ?? Employees assemble diesel engines in the China-Belarus Industrial Park in the Belarusian capital of Minsk.
XINHUA Employees assemble diesel engines in the China-Belarus Industrial Park in the Belarusian capital of Minsk.

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