Jiangsu accelerates work resumption to guarantee supply chain
By Yao Xueqing, People’s Daily
Scientific personnel are racing against time to research
on and develop COVID-19 vaccine at a lab of Suzhou Abogen
Biosciences, east China’s Jiangsu province.
The company fully resumed work on Feb. 3 to accelerate
research and development of COVID-19 vaccine, on the heels of an anti-COVID-19
provincial program that encourages scientific personnel to carry out research
on epidemic prevention and control, diagnosis and treatment, testing, and
application of medical instruments.
As a major export-oriented city, Suzhou has rolled out a
package of policies to help enterprises resume work and production and
stabilize foreign trade and investment, including a 12-term package that aims
to maintain stability of the foreign trade enterprises issued at the early
phase of work resumption.
Ying Bo, CEO of Suzhou Abogen Biosciences, said the company
received a two-million-yuan special fund on
R&D of COVID-19 vaccine only five days after application. Besides, it enjoys
a three-month rent exemption offered by the bioengineering and pharmaceutical
industrial park where it is located. The park also provides a place for
the company to develop the mRNA vaccine.
“We’ve been given strong policy support to resume
production,” said Cai Qifeng, head of the operation department of
Chunhua Technology (Kunshan) Co., Ltd. located in Kunshan, Jiangsu province.
Sending workers back to the company through a chartered
train, Kunshan New & Hi-tech Industrial Development Zone, where the company
locates, also issued an allowance of 546,000 yuan for the company to stabilize
employment, subsidized the company with 34,600 yuan for its import and export
businesses, and offered it with a three-month discount of social insurance
contribution, Cai introduced.
The foreign trade companies in the province are also making
efforts on their own parts to restructure and upgrade their businesses.
“The epidemic is a test to our ability to develop,”
according to Chen Xiaodong, president of Jiangsu Guotai International Group
based in Zhangjiagang, Jiangsu. Chen believes that his company must retain its
customers, market and channels, focus on key clients, and maintain shares in
mainstream markets and supply channels. Besides, it also needs to improve its capabilities
and reduce costs.
“The production of our manufacturing department has returned
to a normal level, and the sales volume in March is expected to reach 80
percent of that before the epidemic. We are affected by the epidemic in the
short term, but our headquarters is still confident about the Chinese market,”
said Yang Ming, deputy general manager of Panasonic Industrial Devices
Materials (Suzhou) Co., Ltd., adding that the company will expand its input in
technological reform so as to transform and upgrade its products.
Affected by the epidemic, the industrial, supply and value
chains all face a new round of restructuring. As an important link on the
global supply chain, Suzhou has found its niches and strived to maintain, complete
and improve the supply chain.
After having a thorough investigation into the work
resumption of the suppliers, OEMs, and distributors of major companies in the
sectors closely related with epidemic prevention and control, production, and
daily life, as well as other industries that concern national economy and
people's livelihood, Suzhou made a list of alternative companies. As of March
15, the city had mobilized 3,582 enterprises to restart work.
Wistron Group located in Kunshan Comprehensive Bonded Zone,
Jiangsu province which has about 500 suppliers found 47 first-tier suppliers in
just a day thanks to the coordination of local government, said Zhou Hongren,
general manager of the east China region of the company. These suppliers
accelerated the company's work resumption and secured its supply chain, Zhou
added.
As a major export-oriented province, Jiangsu has unveiled 22
measures to actively cope with the epidemic and stabilize foreign trade. A
number of cities, including Suzhou, Wuxi, Taizhou and Nantong have all come up
with policies to support foreign trade since February. They’ve also proactively
offered assistance to enterprises to resume production.
Statistics from the Bureau of Commerce of Jiangsu province
indicate that by March 24, more than 94 percent of the province’s wholly foreign-owned
enterprises, 99.7 percent of enterprises above designated size, and nearly 90
percent foreign trade companies in the province had resumed production. Major
foreign trade companies and those above designate size have all restarted
operation. All of them are accelerating capacity recovery.
A fully loaded container vessel leaves for Japan from a
container wharf in Taicang, east China’s Jiangsu province, April 14. Photo by Ji
Haixin, People’s Daily Online
Jiangsu accelerates work resumption to guarantee supply chain
Reviewed by PEOPLES MAIL
on
07:39
Rating:
No comments: