A real estate project with a total investment of 800 million yuan
began recently in the capital city of Qinghai Province, one of a
growing number of overseas-funded projects in the northwest China
province.
Funded by a Hong Kong-based real estate company, the project is so
far the largest to receive overseas investment in Qinghai, a remote
and less developed province in west China.
The local government said foreign investors are showing more and
more interest in Qinghai since China launched its western
development plan.
During the first seven months of this year, 24 foreign companies
promised to invest 150 million US dollars in Qinghai, a
year-on-year rise of 57 percent. So far 130 million US dollars have
been invested, three times more than the same period of last
year.
In
the past 17 years, 308 overseas companies, with a contractual
investment of 690 million US dollars, have been approved to invest
in Qinghai, and 370 million US dollars has been invested.
The overseas investment came from Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan and
companies from 20 countries including Japan, the Republic of Korea,
the United States, France, Canada and Australia, according to Wu
Dawei, a senior official with the foreign trade and economic
cooperation authorities under the provincial government.
Overseas funds have gone to areas such as hydropower plants, oil
and natural gas, agriculture, pharmacy, infrastructure, real
estate, environmental protection and tourism, Wu said.
Located in the eastern part of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, the
province's rough landscape and poor transportation system make
economic development difficult.
(eastday.com October 15, 2002)
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