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East Asia Forum
Economics, Politics and Public Policy in East Asia
and the Pacific
http://www.eastasiaforum.org
China’s marine economy
17th November, 2011
Author: Liu Shuguang, Ocean University of China
China’s central government approved Guangdong Province’s plan to build a national-level
marine economic-development zone on 20 July, establishing a clear trend in this direction.
Guangdong’s is the third plan approved so far this year, following those for Shandong and
Zhejiang. This trend clearly indicates the strength of China’s marine economic strategies within
its 12th Five-Year Plan. But with increasing regional competition for marine spaces and shipping
lanes, these strategies are bound to impact the international community — and especially the
littoral states of the regional seas [1].
China’s marine-economy initiative is an important part of its strategic reorientation from a
traditional export-driven economy [2], which depends more on hinterland resources. The 2008
global financial crisis accelerated this change in strategy, a change that has since been driven
by China’s stimulus packages. The rising inter-provincial competition for more coastal
development spaces and preferential policies also act as strong local forces driving the strategy.
China has seen its centres of economic activity shift from the hinterland to coastal regions
during its 2000-year history, with coastal economies attaining considerable prosperity during the
early Tang and Ming dynasties. The opening of the maritime silk route, as well as frequent
maritime trade with Northeast and Southeast Asian countries, generated steady development in
China’s coastal regions over the centuries.
Today, the Tumen River Area Development Project (TRADP) is a typical example of
multinational cross-border and cross-sea cooperation [3] which has been in play since the early
1990s. It involves three countries linked by the Tumen River — Russia, China and North Korea —
as well as South Korea and Mongolia. The experiences of TRADP are of great value for similar
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East Asia Forum
Economics, Politics and Public Policy in East Asia
and the Pacific
http://www.eastasiaforum.org
projects requiring international cooperation — even though the initiative did not fully realise its
initial UNDP-conceived goal of pushing forward Tuman River Triangle cross-border cooperation.
The Guangxi Beibu Bay Economic Zone Development Plan, in operation since the late 1990s, is
another ongoing case of cooperation with Southeast Asian countries, namely, Brunei,
Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines. Under the jurisdiction of the Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region’s local government, this project is designed to create a regional
hub for trade, logistics, processing and manufacturing activities aimed at promoting economic
cooperation with surrounding areas.
As China’s first national-level marine economic-development strategy, the Shandong Peninsula
Blue Economic Zone has improved cross-sea cooperation with South Korea’s western coastal
region. The plan for the project’s first phase comprises the construction of a pilot region for the
China-ROK Free Trade Area and a train ferry program.
Zhejiang Province, as the second national-level marine economic zone, takes pride in its
human-capital endowments. It also enjoys the privileges of its first national-level oceanic
economy district, the Zhoushan Archipelago New Area. With its competitive location adjacent to
the Yangtze River Delta, Zhoushan has established steady relations with many overseas
partners. Singapore ranked as its second-largest investor in early 2011, for example, with 17
projects in Zhoushan valued at US$215 million. These projects involve marine engineering, ship
repairs, ship industrial services, information consultation and tourism development.
And with the implementation of the China-ASEAN FTA, Guangdong gains an edge in facilitating
cross-sea cooperation with ASEAN member states, and is expected to achieve far greater
success than Shandong and Zhejiang. Guangdong is establishing a trade and economics office
in Singapore to help its companies expand their businesses in Southeast Asia. Guangdong’s
marine economic strategy will undoubtedly result in bigger business opportunities with ASEAN
members, ranging from processing industries and marine tourism to maritime logistics services
— and this is a significant step for the province.
China needs to revamp its traditional economic model, which is characterised by extensive
utilisation of marine resources and spaces, irrational competition among coastal provinces over
developing traditional marine industries, and the rampant establishment of container terminals.
This demands a shift to a blue economy that values the management and conservation of
marine resources.
In particular, the practice of attracting FDI by means of extensive land reclamation in the coastal
zones should be rectified. And the capacity of specific ecosystems to withstand marine and
coastal projects must be carefully appraised before these ventures are presented to overseas
investors. Greater international cooperation is needed among marine and maritime
organisations or clusters, marine research parks and overseas coastal regions to employ
marine economic strategies more effectively. More attention should also be paid to offshore
activities’ harmful impacts on the environment. Some experts from neighbouring countries like
South Korea have expressed concern over increased contamination and deterioration in the
Yellow Sea as a result of offshore activities. As such, efforts in monitoring and tackling potential
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East Asia Forum
Economics, Politics and Public Policy in East Asia
and the Pacific
http://www.eastasiaforum.org
threats in the regional seas should be reinforced.
Liu Shuguang is Professor of Marine Development at the Ocean University of China [4] and a
Visiting Senior Fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies [5] (RSIS), Nanyang
Technological University.
A version of this article originally appeared here [6] as RSIS Commentary No. 154/2011.
Article from the East Asia Forum: http://www.eastasiaforum.org
URL to article: http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2011/11/17/china-s-marine-economy/
[1] especially the littoral states of the regional seas:
http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2011/08/26/south-china-sea-dispute-why-china-takes-a-pra
gmatic-stance/
[2] reorientation from a traditional export-driven economy:
http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2009/05/19/asian-development-bank-and-the-invention-of-a
-new-asian-growth-paradigm/
[3] multinational cross-border and cross-sea cooperation:
http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2011/04/05/indian-ocean-dynamics-an-indian-perspective/
[4] Ocean University of China: http://www.ouc.edu.cn/english/
[5] S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies: http://www.rsis.edu.sg/
[6] here: http://www.rsis.edu.sg/publications/Perspective/RSIS1542011.pdf
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