Not long after the Spring Festival holiday, busy work resumed at a number of foreign-funded projects in Guangdong Province, China s manufacturing heartland.
Trucks loaded with building materials could be seen zooming around a construction site in the city of Huizhou, where U.S. energy giant ExxonMobil has broken ground at its solely funded chemical complex.
In Zhanjiang, another city in Guangdong, German chemical giant BASF is pushing ahead with its Verbund project, the first wholly foreign-funded project in China s heavy chemical industry.
High returns on investment, an improving business environment under the promise of further opening-up, and the country s sweeping success in containing COVID-19 have bolstered China s appeal to international investors despite the pandemic and resulting economic slowdown.
2021-03-02 08:31:33 GMT2021-03-02 16:31:33(Beijing Time) Xinhua English
GUANGZHOU, March 2 (Xinhua) Not long after the Spring Festival holiday, busy work resumed at a number of foreign-funded projects in Guangdong Province, China s manufacturing heartland.
Trucks loaded with building materials could be seen zooming around a construction site in the city of Huizhou, where U.S. energy giant ExxonMobil has broken ground at its solely funded chemical complex.
In Zhanjiang, another city in Guangdong, German chemical giant BASF is pushing ahead with its Verbund project, the first wholly foreign-funded project in China s heavy chemical industry.
High returns on investment, an improving business environment under the promise of further opening-up, and the country s sweeping success in containing COVID-19 have bolstered China s appeal to international investors despite the pandemic and resulting economic slowdown.