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Governor: Luo Qingquan
Capital: Wuhan
Government office address: Shuiguohu, Wuchang, Wuhan City
Tel: 027-8723 5544, 8723 5552
Postcode: 430071
Website: www1.cnhubei.gov.cn | |
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Geographic location
Hubei is situated in central China, extending across two major river systems – the Yangtze and Hanjiang. It adjoins Henan on the north, Anhui on the east, Jiangxi on the southeast, Hunan on the south, Chongqing Municipality on the west and Shaanxi on the northwest. Lying between 29°05'-33°20' north latitude and 108°21'-116°07' east longitude, Hubei covers an area of 185,900 sq km, accounting for 1.94% of the national total, ranking the 16th nationwide. | |
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General Economy |
Gross domestic product (GDP) |
GDP for 2005 was 648.45 billion yuan, up 11.4% from the previous year. |
GDP ratio (primary, secondary and tertiary industries) |
The primary industry yielded a value added of 106.981 billion yuan, 4.0% more than that of the previous year; the secondary industry, 277.437 billion yuan, a growth of 13.7%; the tertiary industry, 264.032 billion yuan, a growth of 11.8%. The GDP ratio of the three sectors is 16.5: 42.8: 40.7. |
Revenue and expenditure |
Provincial revenue was 37.418 billion yuan, an increase of 20.6% over the previous year. Provincial expenditure was 77.452 billion yuan, an increase of 20.7%. |
Consumer price index (CPI) |
CPI was 102.9, down 2 percentage points from the previous year. |
Investment in fixed assets |
Fixed asset investment was valued at 283.475 billion yuan, up by 20.3% from the previous year. |
Major Industries |
Agriculture |
In 2005, the province's total agricultural value added was 4.0% up from the previous year. The output of grains totaled 21.77 million tons, an increase of 3.7% from 2004. |
Industry |
The industrial added value of all state-owned enterprises and private businesses whose annual sales income each tops 5 million yuan totaled 200.789 billion yuan, an increase of 19.3%. The added value from hi-tech industries stood at 53.392 billion yuan, up by 23.5%. |
Construction |
Its output value was 125.684 billion yuan, up by 12.2%. |
Transportation |
Freight carried by various means of transport during the year amounted to a total of 166.93 billion ton-kilometers, 6.9% up from the previous year. Passengers carried by various means of transport numbered 80.164 billion person-kilometers during the year, up 5.0%. |
Postal and telecom services |
The annual turnover of postal operations and telecommunications totaled 37.09 billion yuan, 26.9% up from the previous year.
At the end of 2005, the number of fixed line subscribers reached 12.36 million, an increase of 1.62 million from the 2004 figure; and the number of mobile phone subscribers reached 14.01 million, an increase of 2.71 million. The Internet users numbered 3.928 million. |
Retail |
The annual turnover from retail sales reached 296.458 billion yuan, an increase of 13.2% from the previous year. |
Tourism |
Foreign exchange earnings from tourism totaled US$276 million, up by 43.6%. Revenue from domestic tourism totaled 45.076 billion yuan, up by 14.3%. |
Continued Effects of Market Reform |
Imports & exports |
The annual value of imports and exports totaled US$9.092 billion, an increase of 34.3% from the previous year. Of this figure, US$4.45 billion was from exports, up 31.5% and US$4.642 billion was from imports, up 37.0%. |
Economic and technological cooperation |
Overseas project and labor contracts signed during the year were valued at US$360 million, up 15.5% from the previous year. Business turnover for the year totaled US$318 million, an increase of 16.3%. |
Foreign investment |
In 2005, foreign direct investment and investment from other sources totaled US$2.65 billion, up by 12.4% from the year before. |
Social Undertakings |
Science and technology |
R & D expenditure of the province totaled 6.6 billion, up by 16.3% from 2004. A total of 11,131 technological contracts were signed, they were valued at 5.018 billion yuan, up 7.2% from the year before. |
Education |
The number of students enrolled in institutions of higher learning during the year stood at 315,600. A total of 187,900 students graduated. |
Culture |
By the end of 2005, the province had a total of 98 arts performance organizations, 128 cultural and arts centers, 104 public libraries, 98 museums and 93 cinemas. Cable TV program subscribers numbered 5.076 million. |
Public health |
At the end of the year, there were 9,285 public health institutions staffed with a work force of 213,800 people and equipped with 137,800 beds; and 276 epidemic prevention and treatment centers staffed with 11,600 people. |
Sports |
The athletes from the province won 8 golds, 4 silvers and 5 bronzes in international games. |
Welfare and aid |
Welfare units across the province are equipped with 183,000 beds and put up 169,000 homeless and vagrant people. There were 5,700 urban community service facilities at the end of the year. The welfare lottery reaped sales of 2.781 billion yuan in 2005. A total of 801,000 rural residents had been covered by the regular relief funds by the year-end. |
Population, Employment, Social Security and Living Standards |
Population |
The year 2005 saw births of 526,000, or a birth rate of 8.74‰, and deaths of 343,000, or a death rate of 5.69‰, in the province. The natural growth rate of the population stood at 3.05‰. At the end of the year, the total population stood at 60.31 million. |
Employment |
A total of 654,000 new jobs were created during the year, an increase of 49,000 compared with the previous year. By the end of the year, 35.37 million of the province's population were employed, an increase of 300,000 from the previous year-end. |
Registered unemployment rate |
The registered urban unemployment rate was 4.33%, down by 0.13 percentage points from the previous year. |
Social security |
By the end of 2005, insurance plans for endowments, medical treatment, and unemployment had covered a population of 8.053 million, 5.02 million, and 3.915 million respectively. About 1.461 million urban residents and 730,000 rural residents received minimum living allowances from the government. |
Residents' income |
The disposable income of urban residents was 8,786 yuan per capita, up by 9.5% from 2004. Rural residents' per capita net income was 3,099 yuan, up 7.2%. |
Geography and Natural Conditions |
Elevation extremes |
Hubei is located in the transitional region from the second to the third terrace in the terrain of China, thus having a variety of landforms. It is surrounded by Wuling, Wushan, Daba, Wudang, Tongbai, Dabie and Mufu mountains on the west, north and east. Lying in the central and southern parts is the Jianghan Plain which extends to Hunan Province to link with the Dongting Lake Plain. Except for the hills on the fringes of the plain, the altitude on the plain is 35 meters or lower above sea level. The proportion of various landforms to the total area of the province is as follows: Mountains, 55.5%; hills and hillocks, 24.5%; and plain and lake areas, 20%. The elevation of different parts varies greatly. Shennong Summit, the highest peak of Shennongjia in west Hubei, which is known as the "Roof of Central China," is 3,105 meters above sea level, while Tanjiayuan of Jianli County on the eastern plain has an elevation of zero. |
Climate |
Hubei has a subtropical monsoon climate. It enjoys abundant sunlight, with the annual amount of solar radiation totaling 85-114 kilocalories per square cm and annual duration of sunshine averaging 1,200-2,200 hours. Temperature is on the high side, with annual temperature averaging between 13-18℃. The highest temperature can reach 41℃, while the lowest temperature can drop to -14.9℃. The short frost period and abundant precipitation are favorable for agriculture. There are 230 to 300 days free of frost in a year and the annual rainfall has stood at 1,182.3 mm for many years. But rainfall is unevenly distributed. The amount of precipitation in the Wuling mountainous area is as high as 1,600-1,700 mm, while that in west Hubei is as low as 700-800 mm. |
Natural resources |
Up to date, Hubei has discovered 138 kinds of minerals, 89 of which having their reserves verified. The reserves of phosphorus ore, hongshiite, wollastonite, garnet and marlstone rank the fifth in China, and several others, including iron, phosphorus, copper, gypsum, rock salt, gold amalgam, manganese and vanadium, rank the seventh nationally. But Hubei lacks energy minerals, with limited verified reserves of coal, petroleum and natural gas. The province's recoverable reserves of coal stand at 548 million tons.
Hubei has 10th largest water-surface area in China. The province has 1,193 rivers of different sizes, their lengths totaling 37,000 km. Among these rivers, 42 run more than 100 km. The Yangtze River flows 1,061 km traversing Hubei from west to east. The Hanjiang River, the largest tributary of the Yangtze, runs 878 km in Hubei from northwest to southeast before emptying into the Yangtze River at Wuhan.
Hubei has long been famed as a "province of thousand lakes." There were more than 1,300 lakes in the province in 1985, including 300 major ones which were 3 square kilometers each or larger in size. The majority of the lakes are distributed in the Jianghan Plain. Hubei is rich in underground water resources. Of its estimated 265 billion cubic meters of underground water reserves, 35.57 billion cubic meters are ready for annual extraction, approximately amounting to 36% of the province's average annual surface runoff. There are 58 large reservoirs in the province with a total water storage of 43.75 billion cubic meters.
Hubei boasts a number of large and medium-sized hydropower stations – the Gezhouba, Danjiangkou, Geheyan, Hanjiang, Duhe, Huanglongtan, Bailianhe, Lushui and Fushui. In addition, some thermal power stations have been built in Wuhan, Jingmen, Huangshi and some other places in recent years.
Hubei has a land area of 185,897 square kilometers, constituting 1.94% of the national total. The area of cultivated land is approximately 3.35 million hectares, with per-capita area standing at 0.06 hectares.
There are 570 species of terrestrial vertebrates in Hubei. Dozens of them have been listed as rare animals under state protection. They include golden-haired monkey, serow, leopard (Panthera pardus), white bear, white musk, white deer, white snake, white-crowned king pheasant and red-bellied tragopan. There are also 175 kinds of fish, accounting for about one quarter of the country's total freshwater fish species. Rare species under key state protection include Chinese sturgeon, Chinese paddlefish, mullet and giant salamander.
Hubei boasts both large numbers of broad-leaved deciduous species, which are typical plants of north China, and many broad-leaved evergreen species, which are popular in southern China. There are more than 2,000 species of wild plants, including some 1,300 kinds of medicinal plants and over 30 species either rare in the world or peculiar to China. The well-preserved Shennongjia virgin forest is a natural park of subtropical fauna and flora.
By the end of 2005, the number of nature reserves in the province had reached 62, covering a total area of 1.086 million hectares. |
Tourism resources |
Hubei's tourism resources feature both beautiful landscapes and abundant places of historic and cultural interest. There are six national-level scenic spots, 13 national forest parks and three national nature reserves. Shennongjia has been listed in the UNESCO's program of Man and Biosphere and Wudang Mountain in the list of World Cultural and Natural Heritages. The Three Gorges of the Yangtze River, Yellow Crane Tower and Gezhouba have been listed among China's top 40 tourist scenic sports. Hubei encompasses five famous historical and cultural cites designated by the state, 20 cultural sites under state protection, 365 cultural sites under provincial protection, five sites of Chu city ruins, 73 Chu Cultural sites and over 140 sites relating to the Three Kingdoms (220-265). | |
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