NANNING, Oct. 24 (Xinhua) -- The fourth China-ASEAN Expo
(CAEXPO), slated for Oct. 28-31, will focus on port development, official
sources said here.
This annual event will be held in Nanning, capital of Guangxi Zhuang
Autonomous Region, featuring topics ranging from port development and
cooperation between China and ASEAN, social development and poverty eradication,
cooperation over power for homes and businesses, to cooperation and sustainable
development in forestry, said Zheng Junjian, deputy secretary-general of the
Secretariat for China-ASEAN Expo.
But the overriding theme of this year's CAEXPO will be port development and
cooperation. To underline the theme a large model of an ocean liner has been
created in the open-air plaza outside the international exhibition center in
Nanning, the permanent venue of CAEXPO.
CAEXPO organizers have invited ministers of transportation from 10 ASEAN
member states, their Chinese counterpart Li Shenglin,as well as government
officials of key port cities of ASEAN and China, corporate executives of port
affairs and logistics companies, shipping businesses, shipbuilding and repair
firms, harbor investors to attend a forum where participants will exchange views
and publish opportunities for regional port cooperation, said the CAEXPO
Secretariat sources.
"Through our careful preparation efforts, I hope participants to this
year's CAEXPO will be well informed of progress towards the establishment of a
China-ASEAN free trade zone and the development in Pan-Beibu Gulf cooperation,"
said Li Jinzao, vice chairman of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
More than 700 exhibitors from ASEAN and China will attend this year's
CAPEXPO.
ASEAN (the Association of Southeast Asian Nations), established on Aug. 8,
1967 in Bangkok, now groups Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore,
Thailand, Brunei, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia.
China and the 10 ASEAN members are speeding up tariff reduction to
facilitate the establishment of the China-ASEAN free trade zone.
China's average tariff on ASEAN goods has been slashed from 9.9 percent to
5.8 percent and will further drop to 2.4 percent by 2009. By the time the free
trade zone is established, 93 percent of products from ASEAN countries will be
tariff-free.
China aims to establish free trade zone with Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia,
the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand by 2010. Free trade zones with Vietnam,
Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar are expected to be in place by 2015.
Zhang Xiaoqin, secretary general of China-ASEAN Expo Secretariat, said
China and ASEAN have seen fast growth in bilateral trade in recent years.
According to Zhang, China-ASEAN trade volume was 160.8 billion U.S. dollars
last year, while in the first eight months this year, bilateral trade amounted
to 127.95 billion U.S. dollars. The bilateral trade volume between China and
ASEAN is expected to reach 190 billion U.S. dollars this year.