The municipal government of Shaoxing City in east China's Zhejiang Province has set up dozens of specialized posts to provide more professional, targeted and efficient services for local businesses, particularly those in emerging industries that face new challenges.
The 25 new posts, each focusing on an industrial cluster in a specific field such as medical devices, low-altitude economy and integrated circuit, can quickly come up with new procedures based on new problems in these emerging industries to provide more efficient services for the businesses.
At the Shaoxing Medical Device Science Park, a company plans to build a new production base but lacks the knowledge about relevant approval procedures. After learning about their difficulties, the post at the park visited the company to help them prepare for the application, creating a new government service model.
"The businesses would encounter a lot of problems during approval procedures of their blueprints. To help them, we would find some relevant service departments to give them professional guidance," said Shou Qingrong, head of the post.
Since their establishment this year, all the posts have cultivated new talents who specialize in the specific emerging industry that the posts focus on, so as to be more targeted, professional and efficient when solving new problems for the businesses.
"Some fields involving new quality productive forces don't have a complete institutional design yet. They are very specialized and require many services, so providing them with targeted and professional services is a challenging test on the capability of our government," said Xu Jianchao, director of the government service office of the municipal government.
So far this year, the 25 posts have carried out more than 300 exchange activities and provided services for more than 5,000 enterprises.
East China city provides specialized services for businesses in emerging industries
China is continuing to accelerate its green energy transition while meeting the considerable power demand, with renewable energy representing over 80 percent of the country's new installed power generation capacity.
The latest data showed that China's newly installed capacity for new energy power generation reached 258 million kilowatts from January to November, accounting for 81.5 percent of the total newly installed power generation capacity.
Experts say the renewable energy expansion can be partly attributed to China's efforts to accelerate the construction of new energy bases in its western areas to promote the distribution of new energy production in the more populous central and eastern parts of the country.
"For the next step, China's new energy power generation will be both centralized and distributed. It will also be land-based and sea-based. The generated power will be transmitted to other regions and consumed locally. We will continue promoting the construction of the wind and solar power generation bases in the sandy areas, rocky areas and deserts in the shelterbelt program in the northeast, north, and northwest regions of China. We will push forward the development of the water, wind, and solar power generation bases in southwestern China and the offshore wind power generation bases in eastern China. We will work to strengthen coordination in an effort to comprehensively diversify the supply of new energy," said Rao Jianye, director of the Clean Energy Research Institute under the China Electric Power Planning and Engineering Institute.
China is also improving its new power system, keeping enhancing the system's capability for receiving and distributing new energy so as to support the country's energy transition.
As China races to construct more new energy storage projects like photothermal energy storage projects and compressed-air energy storage projects, so far, the country's new energy storage has a capacity of over 60 million kilowatts, marking a significant achievement in maintaining the stable operation of the country's power system.
By the end of July, China's total installed capacity of wind and solar power had exceeded 1.2 billion kilowatts, more than doubling the 2020 level and achieving the 2030 target six years ahead of schedule.
New energy represents over 80 pct of China's new installed power generation capacity