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The Future of the Greater Bay Area: High-Tech Manufacturing
June 3, 2019
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Beijing has been planning for the development of a high-tech area in the Pearl River Delta. They called it the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macau Greater Bay Area in 2017.
They clearly look up to the success the San Francisco bay area, home to Silicon Valley. And they have been planning to emulate that example.
Here is a map of all the cities involved:
In other words, it is not just Shenzhen, even though the highest concentration of technology companies is in that city. Most cities around the delta have designated one “new area” to host high-tech manufacturing, research, and/or educational institutions:
Qianhaiwan in Shenzhen – mostly for business and logistics
Binhaiwan in Dongguan – education and research, manufacturing
Nansha in Guangzhou – logistics, manufacturing, research
Cuiheng in Zhongshan – manufacturing
And here is a map of the infrastructure built and being built. To get an idea of the massive population of this area, you can count 7 airports, most of them international…
They key words here are shorter trips but also further integration. In particular, note the several new roads linking Hong Kong to Shenzhen. It will be possible to drive straight from Shenzhen Nanshan through Tuen Mun and end up in HK airport. The borders will get blurred over time.
Now, let’s look at the “new areas” under development. All of them are on the seashore and are set to operate port infrastructures.
Qianhaiwan in Shenzhen: a new CBD
This is a special zone that has already been partially built. The North side is for business activities, including some back-office operations for Hong Kong banks. There was even mention, at one point, to have access to Hong Kong (unfiltered) internet there. There will also be many logistical activities. In other words, the plan was to replicate some of the advantages of Hong Kong.
Binhaiwan in Dongguan
Silicon Valley grew around Stanford University, so the government wants a first-class university here too. It will be called the Greater Bay University, and will be set up in this new area. A train and metro station will be set up there.
It will also host an “international technology innovation cooperation zone” and aims at becoming the “industrial core of Dongguan”. I only recently heard of this project, even though it will only be 3km South of our Dongguan prototyping & assembly center. They are starting major land reclamation.
Nansha in Guangzhou
Like Shenzhen’s Qianhaiwan, it is a free trade zone. It already operates a busy port (15.6 million TEU in 2018) and counts large-scale manufacturing facilities (Toyota, Haier, Denso…).
In addition, this district is gathering companies investing in R&D in the fields of autonomous vehicles, electric vehicles, artificial intelligence, and the like.
Cuiheng in Zhongshan
This district of Zhongshan is going to be linked to Shenzhen by bridge (driving to Shenzhen airport or to Qianghaiwan should take 25-40 min), and it hosts the Zhongshan main ferry terminal.
They have been pushing for the establishment of industrial parks in this area since 2015.
What is the impact for importers?
Investment has been flowing to these new areas, and the US-China trade & tech war seems to be accelerating that trend.
If you are making products that do not incorporate bleeding edge technologies, you will be better off working with companies that are further away. I guess prices won’t raise as fast in Huizhou or Jiangmen.
China is still very much in love with manufacturing — as long as it doesn’t pollute excessively. But low-tech activities will be gradually pushed away — as they have been over the past 10 years.
Do you agree? What do you see?
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