Home / Arts & Entertainment / News Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Changxing tea festival steeps investment interest
Adjust font size:

Centuries-old ginkgo trees growing in a nature reserve in Changxing. The ginkgo is called a living fossil because the Chinese-native species can be traced back nearly 200 million years. (Photo Source: China Daily)

Concurrent trade fair

While welcoming tea enthusiasts and tourists from all over the world to participate in the festival, locals also see the event as a good opportunity to attract investors from home and abroad.

The Changxing International Investment and Trade Fair is underway concurrent with the tea culture festival to showcase the county's investment environment and present its investment projects.

Rapid economic growth over the past several years and a broadening of the opening-up process have made Changxing an attractive investment destination in Zhejiang province.

To offer a center for investment, the county built the Changxing Economic Development Zone that meets international standards.

With a planned area of 25 sq km, the zone is now composed of three parks - for hi-tech industries, private enterprises and tourism.

Famous international and domestic businesses such as US-based Johnson Controls, Germany's Haniel and Qingdao-headquartered Hisense have established production facilities in the zone, making it one of the top 10 industrial zones in the province.

Changxing's priority industries for investment include tourism, textiles, electronics, machinery, auto parts and new materials.

Changxing now ranks 56th among China's top 100 counties for comprehensive economic strength.

The county's gross domestic product reached 19.35 billion yuan last year, an increase of 15 percent over 2006.

(China Daily May 27,2008)

     1   2  


Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Earthquake damages Chinese national treasures
The disastrous earthquake which hit southwest China's Sichuan and the surrounding regions has caused the greatest losses of cultural relics in China since 1949.
More
Related >>
- It's time for a tea festival
- Tea Festival in Hangzhou
Most Read >>
- Megan Fox: FHM's sexiest woman
- Celebs arrives on stage for awards ceremony in Cannes
- More donations for quake relief as engines roar
- Harry Potter teenage actor dies during brawl
- Best and worst dressed at Cannes
- International Forum on the Daodejing
- Experience China in South Africa
- Zheng He: 600 Years On
- Three Gorges: Journey Through Time
- Famous Bells in China