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YOU may have never heard of Huizhou, an unremarkable Chinese port on the Pearl River Delta, a couple of hours’ drive from Hong Kong. But if Li Xiufeng has his way, it will soon be as famous as Rotterdam, Houston or Singapore.
The secretary of the local branch of the Communist Party has big ambitions: “We have been to these places and we hope to build Huizhou into such a place, to become one of the most dynamic cities in southern China.”
His strategy is chemicals and while he speaks in the city hall, thousands of his constituents are working at a construction site down the road, each earning about $10 a day building a massive complex that is to become the anchor of the Daya Bay petrochemicals industrial park.
The Government has already cleared a 4.3 square kilometre site on the edge of the bay, shunting some 5,000 villagers off the site to make way for the project that will be the anchor of his grand vision, a $4.3 billion (£2.5 billion) investment by Shell and CNOOC.
The villagers, mainly peasant farmers, have been rehoused, compensated for their crops and given incentive to become urbanites in the vast workshop that is being constructed in the hinterland that lies just beyond Hong Kong’s temples of finance and trade.
In Mr Li’s brave new world, all will be entrepreneurs. The grubby, stinking village is gone and so, too, is the crazy patchwork of terraced fields. In its place is a flattened brown construction site on which Bechtel and JCB, the engineering contractors, are supervising the construction of an industrial machine that will pump out 12 millon tonnes of chemicals every year, molecules that will become television sets, car dashboards, plastic bags, bottles and packaging of every kind: the stuff of urban living.
Right now, things look good. Industrial output in Huizhou has risen by more than 20 per cent a year over the past decade. Local industries are big consumers of plastics and solvents and are the target market for Mr Li’s chemicals.
And no effort has been spared to safeguard the venture.
Simon Lam, the chief executive of the CNOOC/Shell joint venture, says that a feng shui master was consulted.
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