Dong Zhen/ Shanghai Daily news
Shanghai will accelerate urban infrastructure construction with a total
investment of 500 billion yuan (US$73.22 billion) through 2010.
The
massive capital injection was a way to boost internal demand and increase the
chances of stable economic growth amid the global financial turmoil, the city's
construction and transport authority announced yesterday.
The Shanghai
Construction and Transport Commission, overseer of the city's infrastructure
development, said it would focus on promoting the planned and ongoing projects
in five major areas.
These are:
Building budget houses for
low-income families and revamping old complexes
Improving traffic,
waste-water treatment and village facilities in the suburbs
Extending
rail and highway connections to other provinces in the Yangtze River Delta
region
Expanding the city's mass-transit system, including Metros,
vehicle tunnels and bike-only roadways
Focusing on projects aimed at
reducing energy consumption and waste discharge, including waste-water treatment
and garbage-burning factories.
These projects, with a total investment
of 500 billion yuan, are due for completion before 2010.
The city's
other major infrastructure projects, with a total investment of 122.4 billion
yuan, are scheduled to be finished before the end of this year.
Price
increases in construction material, financing difficulties and other fallouts
from the global financial crisis have put great pressure on the projects.
City officials said yesterday construction had already started or been
completed on projects involving 97 billion yuan worth of investment as of the
end of last month. Most outstanding projects were on schedule, they
said.